Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens

The arrival of William Bally’s set of miniature phrenological specimens in Manchester for the Wellcome Collection exhibition Brains: The Mind as Matter (26 July 2013 – 4 January 2014) was an ideal time to reassess the mysteries of its production – was it made in Manchester or Dublin? In what context...

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Main Author: Dr Alice Cliff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Science Museum, London 2014-03-01
Series:Science Museum Group Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sciencemuseum.org.uk/browse/2014/coming-home/
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spelling doaj-b71371b9ec254ab1a3d65971bca210472020-11-24T20:40:27ZengScience Museum, LondonScience Museum Group Journal2054-57702014-03-010110.15180/140102Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimensDr Alice Cliff0Museum of Science & Industry, ManchesterThe arrival of William Bally’s set of miniature phrenological specimens in Manchester for the Wellcome Collection exhibition Brains: The Mind as Matter (26 July 2013 – 4 January 2014) was an ideal time to reassess the mysteries of its production – was it made in Manchester or Dublin? In what context was it produced? Phrenology – the study of the shape and contours of the skull to determine mental faculties – has received attention from historians. But the origin and context of this object, although long part of the canon of 19th-century phrenology, has never been fully explored. Close inspection of the object has enabled analysis of its place in the career of its maker, and its significance today as evidence of the role of material culture in the practice of 19th-century phrenology.http://journal.sciencemuseum.org.uk/browse/2014/coming-home/Johann SpurzheimManchestermaterial culturephrenologyphrenological bustsphrenological headsWilliam Bally
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dr Alice Cliff
spellingShingle Dr Alice Cliff
Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
Science Museum Group Journal
Johann Spurzheim
Manchester
material culture
phrenology
phrenological busts
phrenological heads
William Bally
author_facet Dr Alice Cliff
author_sort Dr Alice Cliff
title Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
title_short Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
title_full Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
title_fullStr Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
title_full_unstemmed Coming home - Bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
title_sort coming home - bally’s miniature phrenological specimens
publisher Science Museum, London
series Science Museum Group Journal
issn 2054-5770
publishDate 2014-03-01
description The arrival of William Bally’s set of miniature phrenological specimens in Manchester for the Wellcome Collection exhibition Brains: The Mind as Matter (26 July 2013 – 4 January 2014) was an ideal time to reassess the mysteries of its production – was it made in Manchester or Dublin? In what context was it produced? Phrenology – the study of the shape and contours of the skull to determine mental faculties – has received attention from historians. But the origin and context of this object, although long part of the canon of 19th-century phrenology, has never been fully explored. Close inspection of the object has enabled analysis of its place in the career of its maker, and its significance today as evidence of the role of material culture in the practice of 19th-century phrenology.
topic Johann Spurzheim
Manchester
material culture
phrenology
phrenological busts
phrenological heads
William Bally
url http://journal.sciencemuseum.org.uk/browse/2014/coming-home/
work_keys_str_mv AT dralicecliff cominghomeballysminiaturephrenologicalspecimens
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