Published in December 2022, "What Really Happened To Laurence" caused a bit of a stir, partly because I didn't explain one of my arguments as well as I should have. I also got something completely wrong: Willem isn't the person depicted in the Surgery Altar.
UPDATE: This is Part 1 of a three-part series, with two new installments from 2024. Please check the playlists tab to view the episodes in order.
References:
Dittmar, Jenna M. and Piers D. Mitchell. “The Afterlife of Laurence Sterne (1713-68): Body Snatching, Dissection and the Role of Cambridge Anatomist Charles Collignon.” Journal of Medical Biography 24, no. 4 (2016): 559-65.
“Giants of History Find a Place to Rest in Coxwold.” The Gazette & Herald, August 8, 2002. Accessed December 16, 2022, at gazetteherald.co.uk/news/6665794.giants-of-history-find-a-place-to-rest-in-coxwold/.
Green, Carole. “Laurence Sterne.” BBC, March 13, 2009. Accessed December 15, 2022, at bbc.co.uk/northyorkshire/content/articles/2009/03/11/laurence_sterne_profile_feature.shtml.
Pseudonymity, P. “DIE-jesting stURNe’s BURIALLs.” In Shakespeare’s Hamlet in an Era of Textual Exhaustion, Edited by Sonia Freeman Loftis, Allison Keller, and Lisa Ulevich, 199-243. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.
Rolleston, Sir Humphry Davy. The Cambridge Medical School: A Biographical History. Cambridge: University Press (1932).
Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Body-Snatcher. 1884. Pall Mall Gazette. archive.org/details/talesfantasies00stevuoft/page/86/mode/2up?view=theater
“Thomas Wakley, The Founder of ‘The Lancet’: A Biography.” The Lancet 148, no. 3804 (1896): 185-87.
Waite, Frederick C. “Grave Robbing in New England.” Bulletin of the Medical Library Association 33, no. 3 (1945): 272-94.
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