MIT Seminar on Environmental and Agricultural History


Ellen Stroud, Bryn Mawr College

"Living Among the Dead:  Corpses and Property Rights in U.S. Environmental 
History"

Dead human bodies may not be merely material, yet they are physical objects of 
significance and value.  Who owns a corpse, and what rights and 
responsibilities does that ownership entail?  Over  the course of the twentieth 
century, Americans have answered those questions in very different ways, as 
their treatments – and uses – of dead bodies have transformed.  Likewise, the 
presence of human remains has had shifting effects on what owners are able to 
do with buildings, plots of  land, and rights of way.  In this talk, Ellen 
Stroud draws from the research for her book project Dead as Dirt: An 
Environmental History of the Dead Body to explore the ways in which modern 
Americans live with and among the material dead.



Friday, February 19, 2010

2:30 to 4:30 pm

Building E51 Room 095

Corner of Wadsworth and Amherst Streets, Cambridge

 

Sponsored by MIT’s History Faculty and the Program in Science, Technology, and 
Society. For more information or to be put on the mailing list, please contact 
[email protected].

 

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