Content area

Abstract

The Body Snatcher was finally published in 1884, and then only because another of his stories--Markheim, a commissioned Christmas ghost story for the Pall Mall Gazette--proved too brief and Stevenson could write no more, his chronic ill-health worsening at the time. The historical figures Burke and Hare, or men very like them, appear as nocturnal bit-players in Stevenson's story, "unclean and desperate interlopers who supplied the table", delivering the body of a young woman for dissection. Stevenson's acute analysis of degrees of guilt; the complicit socialisation of maleness; the hypocrisies which so often lie behind worldly success; the damage behind apparent failure; the dark silences that can exist in social relations that pass as bonhomie.

Details

Title
Robert Louis Stevenson's The Body Snatcher
Author
Richardson, Ruth
Pages
412-413
Section
Perspectives
Publication year
2015
Publication date
Jan 31, 2015
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
01406736
e-ISSN
1474547X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1649142209
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Jan 31, 2015