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Necrophilia, also called thanatophilia and necrolagnia, is the sexual attraction to corpses. It is classified as a paraphilia by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association. The word is artificially derived from Ancient Greek: νεκρός (nekros; "corpse," or "dead") and φιλία (philia; "love"). The term appears[1] to have originated from Krafft-Ebing's 1886 work Psychopathia Sexualis.[2]
Rosman and Resnick (1989) reviewed information from 34 cases of necrophilia describing the individuals' motivations for their behaviors: these individuals reported the desire to possess an unresisting and unrejecting partner (68%), reunions with a romantic partner (21%), sexual attraction to corpses (15%), comfort or overcoming feelings of isolation (15%), or seeking self-esteem by expressing power over a homicide victim (12%).[3]
Contents |
History
Necrophilia was practiced in some ancient cultures as a spiritual means of communicating with the dead (Shamanism), while others employed it as an attempt to revive the recently departeddubious . The evidence of necrophilia practices can be found in the artifacts of the Moche civilization of South America, where pottery depicting skeletal figures engaged in coitus with living humans are among the ruins.citation needed Even in ancient Egypt, there is record of the treatment of the bodies of young women that were set out to decompose for a few days before being delivered to embalmers. This practice originated from the need to discourage the men performing the funerary customs from having sexual interest in their charges. Herodotus writes[4] in The Histories that, to discourage intercourse with a corpse, Ancient Egyptians left deceased beautiful women to decay for "three or four days" before giving them to the embalmers.[5][6]
In some societies the practice was enacted owing to a belief that the soul of an unmarried woman would not find peace; among the Kachin of Myanmar and the Nambudri of India, versions of a marriage ceremony were held to lay a dead virgin to rest, which would involve intercourse with the corpse. Similar practices obtained in some pre-modern Central European societies when a woman who was engaged to be married died before the wedding.[7]
When Countess Marie Walewska, former mistress of Napoleon, died in 1817 her heart was placed in the crypt of the d'Ornano family in Pere Lachaise in Paris while her body was brought back to Poland for burial. In 1869, however, her coffin was found to be empty. It was speculated that some unknown necrophile had removed her remains.[8]
Sergeant Bertrand of the French 74th Regiment was tried by military tribunal on 10 July 1847 after having been wounded by guards at Pere Lachaise. He admitted to opening a number of graves in the cemetery and engaging in intercourse with deceased women. Bertrand was sentenced to a years' imprisonment; upon his release he immediately left the vicinity and was never heard of again.
Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck (1830-1916) engaged in a form of thanatophilia following the death in 1884 of his first wife, the former courtesan Pauline Thérè se de Païva, better known as La Païva. Her naked body was immersed in alcohol in an isolated room of Henckel's castle at Neudeck in Silesia. Henckel visited her corpse regularly for a strange sort of contemplation. It is said that when, several years after their marriage, Henckel's second wife unexpectedly discovered the body of her predecessor, preserved in all its glory in a glass tank of alcohol, she suffered a mental breakdown.
On 25 March 1886 Henri Blot entered the cemetery of Saint-Ouen in search of the body of Fernande Méry, called Carmanio, a recently deceased ballerina. He opened her grave and engaged in intercourse with her corpse. Again on 12 June 1886 he entered the same cemtery, opened the grave of a recently deceased woman and violated her mortal remains. This time, however, he fell asleep and was seized by guards. During his trial he stunned the court with the assertion, "Every man has his own tastes. Mine is for corpses." Blot was sentenced to two years' imprisonment.
Research
In 1958, Klaf and Brown[6] commented that, although rarely described, necrophilic fantasies may occur more often than is generally supposed.
Rosman and Resnick[9] (1989) theorized that either of the following situations could be antecedents to necrophilia (pp. 161):
- The necrophile develops poor self-esteem, perhaps due in part to a significant loss;
- (a) He/she is very fearful of rejection by women/men and he/she desires a sexual partner who is incapable of rejecting him/her; and/or
- (b) He/she is fearful of the dead, and transforms his/her fear — by means of reaction formation — into a desire.
- He/she develops an exciting fantasy of sex with a corpse, sometimes after exposure to a corpse.
The authors also reported that, of their sample of 'necrophiliacs,' 68 percent were motivated by a desire for an unresisting and unrejecting partner; 21 percent by a want for reunion with a lost partner; 15 percent by sexual attraction to dead people; 15 percent by a desire for comfort or to overcome feelings of isolation; and 12 percent by a desire to remedy low self-esteem by expressing power over a corpse (pp. 159).
At the end of their own report, Rosman and Resnick wrote that their study should only be used like a spring-board for further, more in depth, research.
Minor modern researches conducted in England have shown that some necrophiles tend to choose a dead mate after failing to create romantic attachments with the livingcitation needed.
Character orientation in western society
Human beings
For psychologist/philosopher Erich Fromm, necrophilia is a character orientation which is not necessarily sexual. It is expressed in an attraction to that which is dead or totally controlled. At the extreme, it results in destructiveness and a hatred of life.
For Fromm, necrophilia is the opposite of biophilia. Unlike Freud's death instinct, it is not biologically determined but results from upbringing. Fromm believed that the lack of love in the western society and the attraction to mechanistic control leads to necrophilia. Other factors include; the impact of modern weapon systems, idolatry of technology, and the treatment of people as things in bureaucracy.[10][11]
Animals
Necrophilia is not unknown in animals, with a number of confirmed observations.[12] Kees Moeliker allegedly made one of these observations while he was sitting in his office at the Natuurmuseum Rotterdam, when he heard the distinctive thud of a bird hitting the glass facade of the building. Upon inspection, he discovered a drake mallard lying dead about two meters from the building. Next to the downed bird there was a second drake mallard standing close by. As Moeliker observed the couple, the living drake picked at the corpse of the dead one for a few minutes and then mounted the corpse and began copulating with it. The act of necrophilia lasted for about 75 minutes, in which time, according to Moeliker, the living drake took two short breaks before resuming with copulating behavior. Moeliker surmised that at the time of the collision with the window the two mallards were engaged in a common motif in duck behavior which is called rape flight. "When one died the other one just went for it and didn't get any negative feedback -- well, didn't get any feedback," according to Moeliker.[13][14] This is the first recorded case of necrophilia in the mallard duck- though not the only recorded case of homosexuality within the bird family.[15]
In the case of a praying mantis, necrophilia could be said to be part of their methods of reproduction. The larger female will often decapitate or even eat her mate during copulation.[16]
Legality
Consensuality issue
Although obtaining consent is not usually considered a prerequisite for activity with non-living material, sexual activity with a human corpse is considered to be taboo and frequently labelled as abuse to the deceased persons, based on the presumption that the person would not have consented to the act while alive, and that it would thus constitute a profound disrespect for their remains to be treated in a way other than their assumed wishes.citation needed
Although virtually all human societies condemn sexual activity with the dead as a form of symbolic disrespect,citation needed several groups, individuals, and publications have pushed for the legalization of necrophilic acts. "The NecroErotic," for example, lists 9 "Necrophilic Principles," which argue that "... necrophiliacs have as much right to engage in their orgasmic release of choice as do 'normal' [living] couples," and that "all 'rights' cease the moment a person draws their last breath."[17]
Status
India
Section 297 of Indian Penal Code (IPC) entitled "Trespassing on burial places, etc", states as follows:[18]
Whoever, with the intention of wounding the feelings of any person, or of insulting the religion of any person, or with the knowledge that the feelings of any person are likely to be wounded, or that the religion of any person is likely to be insulted thereby, commits any trespass in any place of worship or on any place of sculpture, or any place set apart from the performance of funeral rites or as a depository for the remains of the dead, or offers any indignity to any human corpse, or causes disturbance to any persons assembled for the performance of funeral ceremonies, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to one year, or with fine, or with both.
Although Necrophilia is not explicitly stated in IPC, a necrophiliac may be convicted under the above section in the Indian Penal Code. There have been several allegations by relatives of dead women, that the dead bodies of their kin were defiled in the night by mortuary attendants, but none have been proven. The possibility of such an act taking place on a regular basis is not impossible to imagine.[19]
In some cases, where a woman was alleged to have been raped and murdered and the autopsy surgeon failed to find any signs of rape, the relatives have approached the authorities for a second postmortem. The second postmortem is invariably conducted at a different hospital, often necessitating the deposit of the body overnight at the mortuary of the second hospital. In cases where the second autopsy surgeon finds signs of rape, the defendants have been known to allege that the dead body was defiled by drunk mortuary attendants at night. However, no such allegation has been proven in a court of law.[19]
United Kingdom
Sexual penetration with a corpse was made illegal under the Sexual Offences Act 2003. This is defined as depictions of "sexual interference with a human corpse" (as opposed to only penetration), and would cover "depictions which appear to be real acts" as well as actual scenes (see also extreme pornography).
As of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, it is also illegal to possess physical depictions of necrophilia, electronic or otherwise. Necrophilia-pornography falls under the governmental description of extreme pornography, of which, possession is classed as illegal under the aforementioned act.
United States
As of May 2006, there is no federal legislation specifically barring sex with a corpse.[20] Multiple states have their own laws:
- Alabama - Class C felony under 13A-11-13
- Alaska - Class A misdemeanor under 11-61-130
- Arkansas - Class D felony under 5-60-101
- California - Illegal, up to three years in prison (a bill before the legislature would raise the penalty to 8 years)citation needed
- Colorado - Class 2 misdemeanor under 18-13-101
- Connecticut - Class A misdemeanor under 53a-73a
- Delaware - Class A misdemeanor under 11-5-1332
- Florida - Second degree felony under chapter 872.06
- Georgia - Felony, up to 10 years in prison under 16-6-7
- Hawaii - Misdemeanor under 7
- Iowa - Class D felony under 709.18
- Minnesota and Nevada also have laws prohibiting necrophilia[21]
- Ohio - Second/fifth degree misdemeanor under 2927.01
- Oregon - Felony for "Abuse of Corpse" ORS 166.085
- Pennsylvania - Second degree misdemeanor under Title 18 §5510
- Texas - Class A misdemeanor [2]
- Washington - Class C felony for "Sexually violating human remains" RCW 9A.44.105
- Wisconsin - Class G felony under 940.225 (7)
Ethics of necrophilia
It has been arguedweasel words that necrophilia may not be unethical as is widely believed. The argument given in favor is that the human body is like an aircraft, inhabited by the pilot (the soul). The pilot is the only component which matters. Once the pilot has deserted the aircraft, nobody can commit an unethical act against the aircraft.[22]. A further argument is that when a number of non-consensual invasions of the dead body through body orifices, including the vagina - as in embalming - are considered perfectly ethical, why exclude necrophilia only and on which grounds.[22] This view however has been challenged by others.[23]
In the extremely male-dominated society of 19th-century Prussia, Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck evidently felt a proprietary "right" to secretly keep his wife's corpse preserved in alcohol. Given her vanity for clothing and jewelry while alive, he might well have defended his treatment of her corpse as reverent, even worshipful, and not disrespectful.
Notable cases
- Sergeant Bertrand
- Henri Blot
- Ted Bundy
- Jeffrey Dahmer
- Ed Gein
- Karen Greenlee
- Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck
- Patrick Kearney
- Edmund Kemper
- La Païva - victim of thanatophilia
- Gary Ridgway
- Carl Tanzler
- Countess Marie Walewska - presumed victim of necrophilia
- Reg Christie
Necrophilia as represented in the arts
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Shakespeare, influenced extensively by the tragic ethos of the Greek biographer Plutarch, has the senatorial conspirators show the bloodied body of Caesar immense reverence, their general state of mind undergoes a radical transformation when it suddenly turns into thanatophilia for the slain dictator. The conspirator Decius Brutus in attempting to persuade Caesar to go to the senate, duplicitously offers Caesar a sanguine assessment of the day's outcome, and yet the sanguinary and necrophiliac imagery of Calpurnia's dream persists:
This dream is all amiss interpreted;/ It was a vision fair and fortunate:/ Your statue spouting blood in many pipes,/ In which so many smiling Romans bathed,/ Signifies that from you great Rome shall suck/ Reviving blood, and that great men shall press/ For tinctures, stains, relics and cognizance./ This by Calpurnia's dream is signified.
(Julius Caesar Act 2, Scene II)
Cleopatric death cults have often combined elements of both institutional thanatophilia and libidinal necrophilia, with the latter often dominating. Plutarch relates that Octavius' admiration for Cleopatra only grew after her death, that he ordered she be buried alongside Antony in royal splendor, and that on his return to Rome he incorporated an image of the dying Cleopatra (cum-asp) into his triumph. Beginning with the Renaissance and continuing into later centuries individual artists, as well as artistic movements (e.g. Romanticism, Decandatism), have demonstrated a veritable passion for and derived much inspiration from Cleopatra's life and death; among the most well known pictorial iterations of Cleopatra's suicide are Cagnacci's Death of Cleopatra (1658) and Rixens' work of the same name (1874). A work that may have inspired Rixens' painting is Gautier's story Une Nuit de Cléopâtre (1838), which includes a fantastic—and an undisguisedly fetishistic—description of the Egyptian queen's body post-mortem:
Her sole vestment was the linen shroud that had covered her upon her state bed, and the folds of which she drew over her bosom as if she were ashamed of being so little clothed, but her small hand could not manage it. It was so white that the colour of the drapery was confounded with that of the flesh under the pale light of the lamp. Enveloped in the delicate tissue which revealed all the contours of her body, she resembled an antique marble statue of a bather...Dead or living, statue or woman, shadow or body, her beauty was still the same; only the green gleam of her eyes was some what dulled, and her mouth, so purple of yore, had now only a pale, tender rose-tint almost like that of her cheeks.
One could argue that the Legend of Osiris and Isis involved a necrophilic act; Isis is said to have fathered Horus with the dead Osiris's dismembered penis, albeit miraculously. According to Christian Origins in Egyptian Mythology, "an ancient Egyptian relief depicts this conception by showing his mother Isis in a falcon form, hovering over an erect phallus of a dead and prone Osiris in the Underworld."[24]
In Toni Morrison's novel Song of Solomon, Macon Dead is explaining to his son Milkman that he is disturbed by the relationship that his wife Ruth had with her father, Dr. Foster. Shortly after Dr. Foster's death, Macon caught Ruth lying naked in bed with her father's corpse, while sucking on his fingers.
In Algernon Charles Swinburne's poem, "The Leper," the speaker is a scribe who had long desired a woman in the royal house where he is employed. When she contracts leprosy, she is deserted by all others. The scribe then takes care of her, and has an arguably necrophilic relationship with her.
Published in 1930, William Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily" tells the story of a lonely house ridden woman named Emily Grierson who deals with the strange circumstances of the man she loves, and her secret world of necrophilia. The My Chemical Romance song To The End is based on this story.
The 1987 German movie Nekromantik by director Jörg Buttgereit primarily deals with the theme of necrophilia, as does the sequel Nekromantik 2.
The 1994 Cormac McCarthy novel Child of God is a dark tale of a man who takes up life in a cave where he stores the corpses of his victims, and is one of the most remarkably sympathetic depictions of necrophilia in literature. The story is, however, more focused on extreme social alienation and the relationship we have with the outcast.
In Canadian author Barbara Gowdy's short story "We So Seldom Look On Love", a funeral parlour employee learns how to make the penises of recently dead men erect, and she commits sexual acts on the corpses until she is caught. In 1996, the story was adapted into the film Kissed.
A Japanese sub genre of both horror and pornography called ero guro or "erotic grotesque" often deals with necrophilia.
The thrash metal band Slayer recorded a song entitled 'Necrophiliac' for their 1985 album Hell Awaits. It is one of Slayer's most controversial songs and the first song detailing the acts of necrophilia known.
The full version of Type O Negative's song Black No. 1 holds a line that makes reference to Necrophilia. The line in the song reads "Loving you was like loving the dead...was like fucking the dead."
Avenged Sevenfold referred to Necrophilia in the song A Little Piece of Heaven.
Many of death Metal band Cannibal Corpse's songs are about necrophilia, most notably the song "Necropedophile."
The opening line of the Cradle of Filth song "Lord Abortion" from their album Midian, ("care for a little necrophilia, hm?") is a quote from Terry Gilliam's Brazil (voiced by Kim Greist in the film but delivered on the song by Toni King, the wife of the band's vocalist/co-creator Dani Filth).
The video for Tom Petty's song Mary Jane's Last Dance depicts him stealing a corpse of a woman (played by Kim Basinger) from a morgue for a dinner date, clothing her in a wedding dress. Later, Petty is shown carrying her to a rocky shore and throwing her into the sea. In an ending both erotic and macabre, Basinger is seen floating in the water with her eyes open.
References
- ^ (Russian) "НЕКРОФИЛИЯ КАК СТРУКТУРА СОЗНАНИЯ", 2002.
- ^ Krafft-Ebing, Richard von (1886). Psychopathia Sexualis. English translation: ISBN 1-55970-425-X.
- ^ Rosman, J. P., & Resnick, P. J. (1989). Sexual attraction to corpses: A psychiatric review of necrophilia. Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 17, 153–163.
- ^ Herodotus (c. 440 BC). The Histories, Book II, 89:
- "The wives of men of rank when they die are not given at once to be embalmed, nor such women as are very beautiful or of greater regard than others, but on the third or fourth day after their death (and not before) they are delivered to the embalmers. They do so about this matter in order that the embalmers may not abuse their women, for they say that one of them was taken once doing so to the corpse of a woman lately dead, and his fellow-craftsman gave information."
- ^ Brill, Abraham A. (1941). "Necrophilia," Journal of Criminal Psychopathology, 2(4), 433-443.
- ^ a b Klaf, Franklin S., and Brown, William (1958). "Necrophilia: Brief Review and Case Report," the Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 29(143), 645-652. "Inhibited forms of necrophilia and necrophilic fantasies may occur more commonly then is generally realized."
- ^ Walker, Benjamin. Encyclopaedia of Metaphysical Medicine, Routledge 1978, pp. 191-2. Walker cites Rollo Ahmed, The Black Art, John Long, London, 1936, in support.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Rosman, Jonathan P., and Resnick, Phillip J. (1989). "Sexual attraction to corpses: a psychiatric review of necrophilia," Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, 17, 153-163.
- ^ Erich Fromm. 1964. The Heart of Man. Harper and Row.
- ^ Erich Fromm. 1970. The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness. Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
- ^ "Randy rock doves join party with the dead". The Guardian (2005). Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
- ^ C.W. Moeliker (2001). "The first case of homosexual necrophilia in the Anas platyrhynchos (Aves:Anatidae)". Deinsea - Annual of the Natural History Museum Rotterdam 8: 243–247.
- ^ Donald MacLeod (2005). "Necrophilia among ducks ruffles research feathers". Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
- ^ Smith, Dinitia (2004-02-07). "Love That Dare Not Squeak Its Name", New York Times, p. 7.
- ^ Dan Feldman. "The Praying Mantis". Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
- ^ Necroerotic: Necrophilic Principles
- ^ THE INDIAN PENAL CODE (IPC)- Dowry Law Misuse(IPC 498A) By Indian Women
- ^ a b Aggrawal, Anil (2008). Forensic and Medico-legal Aspects of Sexual Crimes and Unusual Sexual Practices. Boca Raton: CRC Press. ISBN 1420043080.
- ^ Section 3a
- ^ as described in the footnote on page 43 of Mary Roach's bestselling book Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers
- ^ a b McKearn, S. Dead Sexy: An Essay on the Ethics of Necrophilia. Anil Aggrawal's Internet Journal of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology [serial online], 2008; Vol. 9, No. 2 (July - December 2008): [about 15 p]. Available from: http://www.geradts.com/anil/ij/vol_009_no_002/papers/paper002.html. Published : July 1, 2008, (Accessed: July 16, 2008)
- ^ Benecke, M. Clandestine Necrophilia - Probably Legal, Still A Problem. Anil Aggrawal's Internet Journal of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology [serial online], 2008; Vol. 9, No. 2 (July - December 2008): [about 5 p]. Available from: http://www.geradts.com/anil/ij/vol_009_no_002/papers/paper003.html. Published : July 1, 2008, (Accessed: July 16, 2008)
- ^ Christian Origins in Egyptian Mythology
Further reading
- Lisa Downing, Desiring the Dead: Necrophilia and Nineteenth-Century French Literature. Oxford: Legenda, 2003
- Richard von Krafft-Ebing, Psychopathia Sexualis. New York: Stein & Day, 1965. Originally published in 1886.
- Mary Roach, Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers. New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 2003.
- E. Wulffen, Enzyklopädie die modernen kriminalistik. Berlin: Langenscheidt, 1910.
See also
External links
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