{"id":12374,"date":"2012-09-21T12:22:11","date_gmt":"2012-09-21T11:22:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=12374"},"modified":"2012-09-21T12:22:11","modified_gmt":"2012-09-21T11:22:11","slug":"taxidermy-women-and-horror","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2012\/09\/21\/taxidermy-women-and-horror\/","title":{"rendered":"Taxidermy, women and horror"},"content":{"rendered":"
SPOILER ALERT: You really ought to have seen\u00a0Psycho<\/strong>\u00a0by now but on the offchance you haven’t I shall
be giving away the twist at the end. Likewise Roald Dahl’s superb
short story\u00a0The Landlady<\/strong>, but you can read it quickly\u00a0here<\/a>.<\/p>\n
After reading
about\u00a0Amanda’s Autopsies<\/strong><\/a>\u00a0taxidermy workshops on
the fabulous\u00a0Mookychick<\/a>\u00a0<\/strong>I
signed up for the next one as quick as you could say \u201clifelong
interest in stuffed animals\u201d. Our victims: guinea
pigs.<\/p>\n Me with Boudica G. Pig<\/p><\/div>\n
The workshop was fascinating, absorbing, and not as gruesome as I
had feared. Having been frozen and bashed about a bit, my subject
(who I’ve since named Boudica) didn’t look anything
like a live guinea pig when I met it, so its\u00a0thingness<\/em>\u00a0made it surprisingly easy to cut
into.<\/p>\n
Although I’m a big fan of badly stuffed animals, from
the famous\u00a0Horniman
Walrus<\/a>\u00a0to the\u00a0facebook
page<\/a>\u00a0du jour, following the workshop I have a
newfound respect for the taxidermist’s art. Taking the
skin off was reasonably straightforward, but my god it’s
difficult to get the creature into the right shape.<\/p>\n
But I was reasonably pleased with the result, and Boudica G.
Pig proudly adorns my mantelpiece. At some point I need to get
her a spear, helmet and tiny chariot but that’s a
project for another day.<\/p>\n
Interestingly, as well as the glamorous Amanda herself and
her assistant on the day I’d estimate that the
workshop participants were nearly all women. Taxidermy is
clearly kinda fashionable at the moment, and although I
can’t say it was at the top of my equality agenda
I’m pleased that women are getting stuck in.<\/p>\n
As noted on the brilliant\u00a0website<\/a>\u00a0of
academic Rachel Poliquin who has just written a\u00a0book<\/a>\u00a0about
taxidermy, there are a surprising number of stuffed animals
finding their way into contemporary art. I first heard
about\u00a0Polly
Morgan<\/a>‘s work a few years ago, but there’s
also\u00a0Merel
Bekking,<\/a>\u00a0Claire
Morgan<\/a>, and the incredibly disturbing work of\u00a0Kate
Clark<\/a>.<\/p>\n
There are even signs that the tired old\u00a0TV
trope<\/a>\u00a0of taxidermy as a hobby for creepy men is
being eroded, with a friendly, sympathetic taxidermist as a
central character in\u00a0Dinner
for Schmucks<\/a>\u00a0and even a\u00a0sexy
indie flick<\/a>\u00a0with a kooky girl taxidermist as the
romantic lead.<\/p>\n
That said, no matter how cool it becomes I doubt taxidermy
will ever stop being creepy altogether. Firstly because it
makes you think of death. Stuffed animals act as a kind of
hipster memento mori. Secondly because part of
taxidermy’s appeal (particularly as part of an
artwork) is its uncanny effect, the ambiguity of animate
or inanimate, alive or dead.\u00a0And finally because
taxidermy is so firmly lodged in the symbolic language of
horror, where it also takes on a fascinating\u00a0gendered
aspect.<\/p>\n One of the victims in Cabin In
The Woods gets friendly with a stuffed wolf head. Image:
MGM<\/p><\/div>\n
But there’s also a number of influential horror
films that contain some form of human taxidermy as an
especially unsettling treat, most of which draw some
of their grisly inspiration from the sickening
‘trophies’ of real life serial
killer\u00a0Ed
Gein<\/a>.<\/p>\n
In\u00a0The
Horror of Everyday Life: Taxidermy, Aesthetics, and
Consumption in Horror Films<\/a>\u00a0Jeffrey Niesel
argues that taxidermy in horror films is often used as
a way to silence feminine subjectivity.\u00a0He quotes
from Jane Caputi’s\u00a0book\u00a0The Age of Sex Crime<\/strong><\/a>,\u00a0in which
she argues that sexual serial killings, far from
being ‘deviant’, represent the logic of
patriarchy taken to an especially brutal
extreme:<\/p>\n
Serial sexual murder is not some inexplicable
explosion\/epidemic of an extrinsic evil or the
domain only of the mysterious psychopath. On the
contrary, such murder is an eminently logical
step in the procession of patriarchal values,
needs, and rule of force.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
For Niesel, \u201ctaxidermy represents the most
literal expression of male violence, and reveals
both the violence and the ultimate instability
located at the core of a patriarchal system that
relies on validation from passive feminine
subjects.\u201d He views taxidermy
in\u00a0Psycho<\/strong>,\u00a0Texas Chainsaw
Massacre<\/strong>\u00a0and\u00a0The Silence of the
Lambs<\/strong>\u00a0as an expression of
the crisis of masculinity as Norman Bates,
the Sawyer family and Buffalo Bill strive
to possess women while silencing their
subjectivity, turning them into objects.
As Niesel observes, \u201ca stuffed woman
is the perfect woman because her male
companion can make her say whatever he
wants.\u201d<\/p>\n
My taxidermy adventure<\/h3>\n
<\/a>
Women wield the scalpel<\/h3>\n
Creepy cool<\/h3>\n
<\/a>
Taxidermy and patriarchy<\/h3>\n
“As harmless as one of these
stuffed birds”<\/h3>\n