The Black Informant

African-American culture, news commentary, politics

We humans are so inventive

Found this in front of our local Pennysaver magazine as I was leaving the grocery store.

In case you cannot read it–

“THE ONLY PAIR OF JEANS that naturally style your legs, reduces your stomach and lifts your butt making you look Fabulous and Sexy”

Meanwhile, back in the 1800s—

“The bustle was a typically Victorian fashion. Although most bustle gowns covered nearly all of a woman, the shape created by the combination of a bustle and corset (accentuating the rump, waist, and bosom) resulted in a highly erotic and idealized conception of femininity, possibly inspired by the exaggerated images of the South African woman known as “Hottentot Venus” exhibited throughout Europe in the first part of the 19th century.” (source)

Hmmmm, Hottentot Venus…

Saarjite Baartman/ The Hottentot Venus

Saarjite Baartman (images below), 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.” (source)

“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.” (source)

August 30, 2007 - Posted by Duane | Uncategorized | | 2 Comments

2 Comments »

  1. Oh my! I didn’t know there was that much interest back then on a bee-hind! well, well

    Comment by VB | August 30, 2007

  2. Where did you get the second image of Saarjite Baartman from? Also, which is the source for information of what is said in that image? It has been imposible to me to find a better image where I could read what is said. Could you help me?

    Comment by juan | February 1, 2008

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