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anthropodermic bibliopegy
(
idea
)
by
weroland
Thu Oct 03 2024 at 19:54:22
Anthropodermic bibliopegy
The practice of
binding books
in
human skin
. The term "
anthropodermic bibliopegy
" comes from the Greek words "
anthropos
" (
human
), "
derma
" (
skin
), "
biblion
" (
book
), and "
pegia
". It specifically refers to the use of human skin as a material for
book covers
. This practice has been reported to have been most common in the
18th
and
19th centuries
, particularly in
Europe
and
North America
and often associated with medical texts, where the skin of executed criminals or unclaimed bodies from hospitals might be used. While once believed to be more widespread, recent scientific testing has revealed that many purported examples of anthropodermic bibliopegy are actually bound in
animal skin
. Confirmed cases are quite rare, with only a few dozen known to exist worldwide. Modern discussions of anthropodermic bibliopegy often focus on the ethical implications of creating and displaying such books.
Satanic Linux
Skin Deep
Necronomicon
tanning
Live Deliciously: The 2024 Halloween Horrorquest
The cover of a book is only skin deep
My skin will remember your skin, but I will no longer know. I will be a ghost forever
This book was stolen from the Harvard College Library. It was later recovered. The thief was sentenced to two years at hard labor.
You don't get to be a wizard by collecting bottlecaps
war trophies for people who have never been to war
When the rescue plane landed, I realized we had resorted to cannibalism too soon.
The economics of bookbinding
Plastic box straps, a Leatherman, and handmade paper - a bookbinding adventure
Mütter Museum
Skin Game
fingerprinting (peptide mapping, nucleotide mapping)
Baltimore Tattoo Museum
Using Google for cultural anthropology
personal effects
200 foreskins
Supporting your views on modern social dynamics by citing anthropology
Medieval Manuscript Production
Bibliopegy
On Our Backs
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