Harvard library removes human skin from book binding

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BetteDavisEyes

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Harvard University removed human skin from the binding of "Des destinées de l'âme" in Houghton Library Wednesday after a review found ethical concerns with the book's origin and history.

French physician Dr. Ludovic Bouland “bound the book with skin he took without consent from the body of a deceased female patient in a hospital where he worked,” according to Harvard Library.

Bouland included a handwritten note inside stating "a book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering,” said associate university librarian Thomas Hyry. The note also detailed the process behind preparing the skin for binding...
 
Presumably Dr. Bouland won't be facing any kind of sanctions, as he died over 90 years ago.
Houghton Library is the steward of a copy of Arsène Houssaye’s Des destinées de l'âme, a meditation on the soul and life after death first published in 1879. The volume’s first owner, French physician and bibliophile Dr. Ludovic Bouland (1839–1933), bound the book with skin he took without consent from the body of a deceased female patient in a hospital where he worked as a medical student in the 1860s.

Edited to de-italicize the book's title
 
Last edited:
Honestly? Just leave the skin on the book. What does removing it achieve at this point?
Well with it having directions, keeping it will make others assume it is an accepted practice.No respect for the deceased or family and could cause the book to attract morbid collectors. JMO
 
Harvard University removed human skin from the binding of "Des destinées de l'âme" in Houghton Library Wednesday after a review found ethical concerns with the book's origin and history.

French physician Dr. Ludovic Bouland “bound the book with skin he took without consent from the body of a deceased female patient in a hospital where he worked,” according to Harvard Library.

Bouland included a handwritten note inside stating "a book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering,” said associate university librarian Thomas Hyry. The note also detailed the process behind preparing the skin for binding... This raises moral and legal issues, especially in terms of respect for the deceased and their heirs. Harvard's decision to remove human skin from the binding is the right decision. I even decided to ask to write my discussion about it and hire people to do it. In fact, I was speechless for the first few minutes. How many books do we hold in our hands and do not understand who made them or handled them before. This incident also reminds us of the importance of re-evaluating historical artifacts with modern ethical standards.
My God, what a nightmare and we are reading this?
 

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