Journal of the History of Collections Advance Access published online on October 9, 2007
Journal of the History of Collections, doi:10.1093/jhc/fhm019
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
The rites of man
The British Museum and the sexual imagination in Victorian Britain
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In the nineteenth century, the British Museum possessed a locked store of erotic objects. However, this did not serve to sanitize the rest of the collection. I use the evidence of an anonymous tract, Idolomania, set in the context of other literary productions of the time, to show how a wave of anti-Catholic agitation led to claims that the public displays of the British Museum were saturated with morally dangerous material. A wide range of objects, images and motifs were interpreted as evidence of pagan fertility cults, thus throwing into question the seemliness of the Museum's public displays.
Correspondence: Address for correspondence Dr Dominic Janes, Faculty of Continuing Education, Birkbeck College, 26 Russell Square, London wc1b 5dq. d.janes{at}bbk.ac.uk