Birth of the Modern City

An exploration of the 19th century urban landscape through images. While initially an extension of coursework for HIST 28903 offered at the University of Chicago, this blog also features interesting finds in the world of archival photography on the web.

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The Paris Morgue

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The Parisian Morgue presents perhaps one of the best examples of the transformative force that institutional power brought to one of the most basic elements of life. Though throughout history the morgue had always served as “a depository for the anonymous dead”[1] the imposition of the state in this matter, specifically the police prefecture, strove to make the process of identification into a clean and ordered matter.

In the 18th century, the existing city morgue, also know as the basse-geole, was a remote underground site, linked with a Prison located at Chatelet. The basement viewing chamber, described as a “stinking pestilent place” came to represent everything wrong with prior levels of regulation in terms of institutional presence, hygiene, and order. In its role, pursuant of the identification of corpses, “visitors could only present themselves one at a time; in order to look into the horrible and somber cave they were forced to breathe the poisoned air of this grotto and put their faces against a narrow opening.”[2]

With an 1804 police order, under the new administration of the First Empire, the morgue was officially transferred to a “specially designed building in the shape of a Greek temple,” a former butcher-shop located at the place du Marche-Neuf. The location was not only central to the city of Paris, located on the Ile-de-la-Cite, but brought with it a massive increase in visibility by a bustling and curious public. The architecture, which promoted a stark visual presentation of death, with a gigantic viewing salon, bridged the gap between living and dead, in a senses feeding into the visual culture and sense of spectacle evolving in this time period.

The institution of the morgue, was therefore central to the production of a new visual culture in Paris. The architecture sought to emphasize the clean lines, and grandiosity of a new French manner of thinking – in this sense too, its subject matter, death came to be increasingly linked with a visual manner of thinking within Paris. Themes of fantasmorgia, shadows & darkness came to represent a fascination of the unknown beyond its administrative function. The initial curiosity which would bring as many as 40,000 individuals through the morgue’s viewing rooms in one day [3], evolved into a manner of thinking that embraced these new forms on a daily level.



April 23, 2009, 1:14pm

Quote
“The morgue is a sight within reach of everybody, and one to which passers-by, rich and poor alike, treat themselves. The door stands open, and all are free to enter. There are admirers of the scene who go out of their way so as not to miss one of these performances of death. If the slabs have nothing on them, visitors leave the building disappointed, feeling as if they had been cheated, and murmuring between their teeth; but when they are fairly well occupied, people crowd in front of them and treat themselves to cheap emotions; they express horror, they joke, they applaud or whistle, as at the theatre, and withdraw satisfied, declaring the Morgue a success on that particular day.”

Therese Raquin by Emile Zola (1867)



April 23, 2009, 12:25pm

Photograph

The Morgue at Paris: The last scene of a Tragedy via pro.corbis.com

The Morgue at Paris: The last scene of a Tragedy via pro.corbis.com



April 23, 2009, 12:25pm

Photograph

Interior view of the Morgue (1845) via Gallica Consultation
A vast exhibition room with gigantic windows greeted visitors to the morgue. The glass was all that separated viewers from the nakes cadavers laid out for viewing. This proximity to death, integrated often into the routines of shoppers at the nearby market, and passer-bys on the Ile-de-la-Cite, greatly influenced the popular imagination.

Interior view of the Morgue (1845) via Gallica Consultation

A vast exhibition room with gigantic windows greeted visitors to the morgue. The glass was all that separated viewers from the nakes cadavers laid out for viewing. This proximity to death, integrated often into the routines of shoppers at the nearby market, and passer-bys on the Ile-de-la-Cite, greatly influenced the popular imagination.



April 23, 2009, 12:24pm

Photograph

La Morgue (1830) via The Brown Univeristy Center for Digital Intiatives
The Morgue, located on the banks of the Seine river, allowed for the easy transport and access to bodies transported by water. This location, also meant that the Morgue retained a now-central place in the the city center, accessible to thousands of individuals on a given day.

La Morgue (1830) via The Brown Univeristy Center for Digital Intiatives

The Morgue, located on the banks of the Seine river, allowed for the easy transport and access to bodies transported by water. This location, also meant that the Morgue retained a now-central place in the the city center, accessible to thousands of individuals on a given day.



April 23, 2009, 12:18pm