TY - JOUR
T1 - From flesh to paper
T2 - bodily and material transformation in 17th century Copenhagen – a case study
AU - Hansen, Peter Wessel
AU - Jakobsen, Jesper
AU - Langen, Ulrik
AU - Simonsen, Rikke
PY - 2025/2/1
Y1 - 2025/2/1
N2 - This article investigates the transformation of the body of a female child murderer as she passed through specific spatial configurations in the urban setting of the seventeenth-century capital of Denmark–Norway. By using the case of Gertrud Nielsdatter, we explore the significance of public urban spaces in the bodily and material transformation of a woman from a condemned sinner to an object of scientific wonder. This transformation was facilitated by practices in diverse public spaces – controlled or influenced by government, city, church, as well as academic authorities and stakeholders – such as the city court, the place of execution, the university and, not least, the book shops across Europe selling books containing the print representing internal organs of Gertrud Nielsdatter. The case demonstrates how the physical body of an ordinary – yet outlawed – Copenhagener was repeatedly transformed in interaction with public spaces and the material culture of buildings, fixtures and fittings.
AB - This article investigates the transformation of the body of a female child murderer as she passed through specific spatial configurations in the urban setting of the seventeenth-century capital of Denmark–Norway. By using the case of Gertrud Nielsdatter, we explore the significance of public urban spaces in the bodily and material transformation of a woman from a condemned sinner to an object of scientific wonder. This transformation was facilitated by practices in diverse public spaces – controlled or influenced by government, city, church, as well as academic authorities and stakeholders – such as the city court, the place of execution, the university and, not least, the book shops across Europe selling books containing the print representing internal organs of Gertrud Nielsdatter. The case demonstrates how the physical body of an ordinary – yet outlawed – Copenhagener was repeatedly transformed in interaction with public spaces and the material culture of buildings, fixtures and fittings.
UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926823000548
U2 - 10.1017/S0963926823000548
DO - 10.1017/S0963926823000548
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0963-9268
VL - 52
SP - 99
EP - 117
JO - Urban History
JF - Urban History
IS - 1
ER -