Plastinated bodies stick around after death
More than 7,000 donors opt to be preserved in plastic, put on display
Slide show |
A look inside Human-anatomy exhibits allow visitors to view preserved bodies in live-action positions. more photos |
DALLAS - Stace Owens has no intention of leaving this world when he dies. He plans to stick around for decades or longer, preserved in plastic and displayed in a museum or medical school.
The 33-year-old real estate agent from Dallas is among more than 7,000 people who have agreed to donate their bodies for plastination, a process in which body fluids are replaced by liquid plastic. The plastic hardens, leaving tissues intact and allowing bodies to be displayed in their natural color and without formaldehyde.
The process was made popular by Gunther von Hagens’ “Body Worlds,” a controversial anatomy exhibit that puts real human specimens on show. Most are flayed and dissected, revealing their organs. Others are kept intact and displayed in dramatic action poses, such as a basketball player driving to the hoop or a runner in full stride.
“I’ve always been a big believer in science and medicine,” said Owens. “It’s like me kind of giving back to knowledge and to anyone out there who’s interested in science.”
But the show has been criticized by some as trivial, disrespectful and voyeuristic. Von Hagens, who developed the technique in 1977, insists he’s helping viewers understand how their own bodies work.
“When I go to the people on the street, to the masses, they have to like what I show,” the 62-year-old German anatomist said. “Therefore, they have to experience an aesthetic shock. Therefore, they have to open their hearts to themselves. Therefore, they have to fall in love with the specimen, and then it will keep in their minds.”
More than 22 million people in 35 cities have visited the exhibit since it debuted in Japan in 1995. Since von Hagens’ donation program began in 1983, 7,652 people have agreed to donate their bodies and 461 have already died, said Georgina Gomez, who manages the North American body donation program for von Hagens’ Institute for Plastination. She’s also a donor.
“I think for me personally that donating my body to science, and specifically to plastination, would be the one (method) that would provide the most good and the most benefit to future people,” she said.
‘A celebration of life’
Owens, who has taken several anatomy and physiology courses, said he became interested in donating after hearing radio advertisements about the traveling show, now in Dallas and Phoenix.
“Seeing the exhibit just emphasized the fact that this was what I wanted to do,” he said. “To me it was really a celebration of life. ... Continuing on with plastination is me helping with the educational process.”
For other donors, plastination is a unique journey beyond death.
Susan Baxter, a 49-year-old homemaker from Fort Worth, said she decided to donate in part because she was against spending thousands of dollars on a funeral.
“My family can go to Tahiti for the price of a funeral,” she said. “Why celebrate me in a box when they can go out and have fun?”
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