The Hottentot Venus

Several
prints dating from the early nineteenth century illustrate the sensation
generated by the spectacle of "The Hottentot Venus." A French
print entitled "La Belle Hottentot," for example, depicts the Khosian
woman standing with her buttocks exposed on a box-like pedestal. Several
figures bend straining for a better look, while a male figure at the far right
of the image even holds his seeing-eye glass up to better behold the woman's
body. The European observers remark on the woman's body: "Oh! God
Damn what roast beef!" and "Ah! how comical is nature."
Exhibiting "Others" in the West

The tradition of exhibiting
people of color in Western societies has existed since the earliest encounters
between Europeans and indigenous populations in the New World and in
Africa. Indeed, on his return to Spain after his first voyage to the New
World in 1492, Columbus brought several Arawaks to Queen Isabella's
court, where one of them remained on display for two years. Exhibiting
non-white bodies as a popular practice reached its apogee in the nineteenth
century in both Europe and in USA when freak shows--the exhibition of native
peoples for public entertainment in circuses, zoos, and museums--became fairly
common. In USA, in particular, the spectacle of "freaks,"
"natives," and "savages" became a profitable industry at
this time, as epitomized in popular traveling shows like Buffalo Bill's Wild
West Show and Barnum and Bailey's Circus. World Expositions were also
popular for the display of native bodies. During the expositions
"natives" performed various ceremonies, rites, dances, and otherwise
went about their (supposed) daily routines (even though they were on the
exposition grounds). In other words, cultural "others" were
employed to perform their "cultural otherness" for an Anglo-American
and European audience. Up to the mid-twentieth century displays of this
sort continued. Live exhibitions were not the only forms of human spectacle;
often the dissected and embalmed remains of the "native" body,
particularly the skulls, and sexual organs, were also publicly exhibited.
Trophy heads, body parts, and other skeletal remains still reside in the
collections of many Western museums, like The British Museum and La Musée de
l'Homme, France. As recently as 1997, a small natural history museum just
outside of Barcelona finally removed a stuffed Bushman from its permanent
display cases, after sustained international pressure to do so. The
incident strongly suggests that European fascination with exhibiting non-white
bodies is not a phenomenon of the distant past.
Saarjite
Baartman/ The Hottentot Venus
Saarjite Baartman, a young
Khosian woman from Southern Africa whose body was the main attraction at public
spectacles in both England and France for over five years, is perhaps the most
infamous case of a Khosian body on display. Baartman, who became known as
the Hottentot Venus, was brought to Europe from Cape Town in 1810 by an English
ship's surgeon who wished to publicly exhibit the woman's steatopygia, her
enlarged buttocks. Her physique, particularly her steatopygic appendage,
became the object of popular fascination when Baartman was exhibited naked in a
cage at Piccadilly, England. When abolitionists mobilized to put an end
Baartman's public display, she informed them that she participated in the
spectacles of her own volition. She even shared in profits with her
exhibitor.
The
spectacle of Baartman's body, however, continued even after her death at the
age of twenty-six. Pseudo-scientists interested in investigating
"primitive sexuality" dissected and cast her genitals in wax.
Baartman, as far as we know, was the first person of Khosian-descent to be
dismembered and displayed in this manner. Anatomist Georges Curvier
presented Baartman's dissected labia before the Academie Royale de Medecine, in
order to allow them "to see the nature of the labia" (Gilman
235). Curvier and his contemporaries concluded that Baartman's oversized
primitive genitalia was physical proof of the African women's "primitive
sexual appetite." Baartman's genitalia continued to be exhibited at La
Musée de l'Homme, the institution to which Curvier belonged, long after her
death. This introduction to the history of human displays of people of color
demonstrates that cultural difference and "otherness" were visually
observed on the "native" body, whether in live human exhibitions or
in dissected body parts on public display. Both forms of spectacle often
served to promote Western colonial domination by configuring non-white cultures
as being in need of discipline, civilization, and industry.

Liberated from Emory University
http://www.emory.edu/ENGLISH/Bahri/Exhibition.html
The 'hottentot venus' image troped into the 'mammy' in north america usa.
Refer to Black Women Images elsewhere.RETURN