Saartjie "Sara" Baartman was apart of a freak show due to her enormous breasts, enlarged hips and over sized buttocks. She had steatopygia. Steatopygia is is a genetic characteristic generally prevalent in women of African origin, most notably among though not limited to the Khoisan.
Saartije was a KhoiKhoi woman from South Africa. she was sold to London by an enterprising Scottish doctor named Alexander Dunlop, accompanied by a showman named Hendrik Cesars. She spent four years in Britain being exhibited for her large buttocks. The labia minora or inner lips, of the ordinary female genitalia are greatly enlarged in Khoi-San women, and may hang down three or four inches below the vulva when women stand, thus giving the impression of a separate and enveloping curtain of skin".
In the 1800s, people in London were able to pay two shillings apiece to gaze upon her body in wonder. Baartman was considered a freak of nature. For extra pay, one could even poke her with a stick or finger. Baartman never allowed this trait to be exhibited while she was alive, and an account of her appearance in London in 1810 makes it clear that she was wearing a garment, although a tight-fitting one.Her treatment caught the attention of British abolitionists, who tried to rescue her, but she claimed that she had come to London on her own accord. In 1814, after Dunlop's death, she traveled to Paris. With two consecutive showmen, Henry Taylor and S. Reaux, she amused onlookers who frequented the Palais-Royal. She was subjected to examination by Georges Cuvier, a professor of comparative anatomy at the Museum of Natural History. In the post- Napoleonic era France, sideshows like the Hottentot Venus lost their appeal. Baartman lived on in poverty, and died in Paris of an undetermined inflammatory disease in December 1815. After her death, Cuvier dissected her body, then displayed her remains. For more than a century and a half, visitors to the Museum of Man in Paris could view her brain, skeleton and genitalia until she was buried.
Although Baartman refused to be an experiment while she was alive. With permission from police, Cuvier, who had amassed the world's largest collection of human and animal specimens, conducted an autopsy on Baartman's dead body. First he made a cast of her body, then he preserved her brain and genitals.Cuvier concluded that "the Hottentots" were closer to great Apes than humans. The rest of Baartman's flesh was boiled down to bones for Cuvier's collection and displayed for years afterward. Baartman's body did not receive a proper burial until much later.After her death, Sarah Baartman's body underwent dissection and 'analysis' of her brain, organs, genitalia and buttocks. Blaineville and Cuvier had asked Baartman to allow them to study her nude while she had been alive and she had refused them this request. No consent had been given by Baartman to allow scientists to see, touch or use her body for 'scientific' purposes after her death.
Della Perry and Ruth Whiteside are feminist theorists who have discussed how the label 'disability' and the term 'biological determinism' have affected the exploitation, discrimination and abuse of women and people of African descent. They comment on how differences in biology have dictated a social hierarchy and stratification. Sara Baartman's organs, genitalia and buttocks were thought to be evidence of her sexual primitivism and intellectual equality with that of an orangutan.
During the lengthy negotiation to have Baartman's body returned to her home country after her death, the assistant curator of Musee de l' homme, Philippe Mennecier argued against her return stating: "we never know what science will be able to tell us in the future. If she is buried, this chance will be lost ... for us she remains a very important treasure." According to Sadiah Qureshi, due to the continued treatment of Baartman's body as a cultural artifact, Philippe Mennecier's statement is contemporary evidence of the same type of ideology that surrounded Saartjie Baartman's body while she was alive in the 19th century.
Media representation and feminist criticism
In November 2014, Paper Magazine released a cover of Kim Kardashian in which she was illustrated as balancing a champagne bottle on her extended rear. The cover received much literary criticism for endorsing "the exploitation and fetishism of the black female body."The photo has received much criticism and commentary on mimicking the way in which Baartman was represented as the "Hottentot Venus" during the 19th century. According to writer Geneva S. Thomas, anyone that is aware of black women's history under colonialist influence would consequentially be aware that Kardashian's photo easily elicits memory regarding the visual representation of Baartman.
Similarly, Baartman and other black female slaves were illustrated and depicted in a specific form to identify features, which were seen as proof of ideologies regarding black female primitivism.
Young boys and so called men in the new generation often refer to women mainly African American women as THOTS. That horrible nasty word stemmed from from her nickname Hottentot Venus. The KKK even adopted the term during slavery that is how they referred to black women.
http://keediescorner.com/2014/08/02/the-origin-of-the-word-thot/

Saartjie Baartman's grave, on a hill overlooking Hankey in the Gamtoos River Valley, Eastern Cape, South Africa
Signboard at the grave, including the poem by
This story on Baartman is very informative. I have seen pictures, and heard of the exploits, but I never delved into the specifics of her experience. Her exploitation after her death is appealing. Della Perry, an Ruth Whiteside are reflective of the idiotic scientific theories of their day. The whole intent was to try to "explain" Africans. The "explanations" no more than always ended up with a prognosis of "subhuman" or "primitive". Of course today we know we are all on the same playing field anatomically. I feel our physical differences are nothing more than adaptations to climate. No race is better, or different than the other.
ReplyDeleteAlthough Kim Kardashian did bring up an important discussion on cultural appropriation, and the black female body image, her "break the Internet" cover was nowhere close to Baartman. It was, in fact a copy of a 1976 magazine photo of Carolina Beaumont taken by Jean-Paule Goode (another Frenchman). I think the real question is....why are the French so obsessed with the black female body?
http://www.iloveoldschoolmusic.com/kim-kardashian-didnt-break-internet-replicated-the-old-school/