List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Structures of Power: Constructing and Publicizing the New Amsterdam Town Hall
Peace and Prosperity
Civic vs. Religious Dominance
Spectacle, Prestige, and Publicity
Public Access and Republican Virtues
2. Procession and Execution Rituals: Moving through the New Amsterdam Town Hall
The Iconography of Justice
Rituals of Justice behind Closed Doors
Public Ceremonies on Execution Day
3. Disposal and Display: The Criminal Corpse on the Gallows
Moving Executed Bodies
Spectacular Displays
Identity Formation at the Gallows
Undignified Decomposition and the Taboo of Touch
4. Subversion and Symbolic Transformation: Recreation, Ambush, and Humour at the Gallows
Ambushed Landscapes
Sexual Innuendo, Leisure, and Acts of Resistance at the Gallows
Grotesque Bodies
5. Serving the Public Good: Reform, Prestige, and the Productive Criminal Body in Amsterdam
Deriving Civic Good
Social Status and the Transformation of Anatomical Practice
Dr. Tulp’s Fame and the Criminal’s Reform
6. The Transformation of Touch: Flayed Skin and the Visual and Material Afterlife of the Criminal Body in the Leiden Anatomy Theatre
A Curious Attraction
Moralizing Values
Paaw’s Vesalian Methods
Interacting with Objects
7. The Symbolism of Skin: Illustrating the Flayed Body
Mythological Precedence
Properties of Paper and Parchment
Tactile Uncovering
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography