17 episodes

Welcome to Drawing Blood, the podcast about art, science, and the macabre, hosted by Emma Merkling and Christy Slobogin.

Drawing Blood Drawing Blood

    • Arts
    • 5.0 • 13 Ratings

Welcome to Drawing Blood, the podcast about art, science, and the macabre, hosted by Emma Merkling and Christy Slobogin.

    Cannibalism on Film, Empathy, and Eating Disorders

    Cannibalism on Film, Empathy, and Eating Disorders

    Emma and Christy look at Julia Ducournau’s first feature film, the cannibal coming-of-age body horror flick 'Grave' (or 'Raw'), 2016. In this episode, we cover cinéma du corps and New French Extremity, empathy and monstrosity, the horrors of being a girl, the horrors of being in a body, eating disorders, veterinary science, ‘being meat’ and becoming animal, vegan cinema, self control, desire, and what it means to be a moral cannibal — and a moral subject.

    • 1 hr 1 min
    Dental Phantoms, Tooth Horror, and Medical Simulation

    Dental Phantoms, Tooth Horror, and Medical Simulation

    Emma and Christy look at dental phantoms — terrifying but ubiquitous tools in dental education since the nineteenth century that feature humanoid heads made out of metal or wood, and a gaping mouth full of teeth. With these objects as our starting point, we talk about why dentists and dentistry are so scary, collectors of vintage medical devices, mouth erotics, the history of simulation and ‘machines’ in medical education, ghosts of the face and the word ‘phantom’, faciality and animality, face transplants and facelessness, dental horror (particularly Little Shop of Horrors) and fetish, and teeth as ‘luxury bones.’

    CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE IMAGES WE DISCUSS, as well as complete show notes, references, and suggestions for further reading.

    MEDIA DISCUSSED
    Columbia Dentoform Corp of New York, Mid-century Dental Phantom Head Model on Custom Stand (c. 1960s)
    Agent Gallery Chicago, ‘Dental Phantoms’
    Agent Gallery Chicago, Group of Dental Phantoms, KaVo Professional Dental Phantom Simulation (twentieth century)
    Brian Kubasco, Steampunk Skull Dental Manikin Oxygen Version 6 (2013)
    Constantin Brancusi, Sleeping Muse (1910)
    ‘Teeth on a Stick’ Dental Phantom: E. Oswald Fergus, ‘Neue Erfindungen und Verbesserungen - Zahnaerztiliches Phantom’ (1894)
    ‘Skull’ Dental Phantom: Eduard Fleischer, Ein zahnaerztliches Phantom (1878)
    ‘Wig Maker Model’ Dental Phantom: Utrecht University Museum Collection, Phantom Head (late 1800s)
    ‘Realistic Face’ Dental Phantom: Utrecht University Museum Collection, Phantom Head (date unknown)
    ‘Realistic Face (contemporary)’ Dental Phantom: Unknown, Dental Phantom Head and Rubber Shroud (1990s)
    ASMR cavity removal example (2022)
    Example of memento mori painting: Edwaert Collier, Vanitas (1663)
    Fox Photos / Getty Images, ‘Two trainee dental hygienists operating on a dentist's dummy’ (1960)
    ‘Xenomorph’ from the film Alien (1979)
    ‘Demogorgon’ from the show Stranger Things (2016)
    Madame du Coudray, Obstetric Phantom / Machine (mid-eighteenth century)
    Koichi Shibata, Geburtshülfliche Taschen-Phanome (1892)
    Kevin James Thornton video: Tammy the Face Ghost (2024)
    Mark Gilbert, ‘Saving Faces’ series (1999)
    ORLAN, Surgical Series (1980s/1990s)
    Frank Oz, dir., ‘Dentist!’ from Little Shop of Horrors (1986)
    Gore Verbinski, dir., Dental Scene and Mouth Scene from A Cure for Wellness (2016)
    The animal mouth the dentist shows Seymour in Little Shop of Horrors
    Thomas Rowlandson, Transplanting of Teeth (1787) 

    CREDITS
    Follow our Twitter @drawingblood_
    Follow our Bluesky @drawingbloodpod.bsky.social
    ‘Drawing Blood’ cover art © Emma Merkling
    All audio and content © Emma Merkling and Christy Slobogin
    Intro music: ‘There Will Be Blood’ by Kim Petras, © BunHead Records 2019. We’re still trying to get hold of permissions for this song – Kim Petras text us back!!

    • 1 hr 2 min
    Minisode 1: Women and Early Modern Mines with Dr Gabriele Marcon

    Minisode 1: Women and Early Modern Mines with Dr Gabriele Marcon

    Surprise — it’s a minisode! In our very first interview, historian of early modern mining Dr Gabriele Marcon (I Tatti / Harvard University) shows Emma and Christy a painting from early modern Spanish America. Join us as we learn about the erotics of mining, the power of menstrual blood, early modern medicine, female alchemists, the long history of women’s invisible labour, elixirs of life, midwifery, and (somehow) Mount Rushmore.

    • 29 min
    Atheist Relics, Couples’ Cremation, and Victorian 'Infidels'

    Atheist Relics, Couples’ Cremation, and Victorian 'Infidels'

    Emma and Christy look at Alfred Gilbert's sculpture Mors Janua Vitae (c. 1905–1907) at the Royal College of Surgeons, London — a life-sized bronze which houses the remains of the couple Edward and Eliza Macgloghlin. We talk relics and transi tombs; Victorian atheism and the history of unbelief; cremation, miasma, and lead-lined coffins; books bound in human skin; Victorian sex (and free love!); affairs between artists and patrons; Welsh druids; paganism; birth control and the throuple; infidel feminism; and abolishing the family.

    • 55 min
    Morphine Addiction, Decadence & Degeneration, and Fin-de-Siècle Paris

    Morphine Addiction, Decadence & Degeneration, and Fin-de-Siècle Paris

    Emma and Christy use Eugène Grasset's lithograph Morphinomaniac (1897) as a starting point to talk about artistic depictions of morphine and historical opioid addiction, as well as decadence and degeneration in fin-de-siècle Parisian society. In this episode, we cover vampires, hypodermic syringes, Orientalism and Japonisme, 'dangerous' women, masturbation, pleasure, and sex work, true crime waxworks, and gendered consumption — of women, goods, and drugs.

    • 1 hr 3 min
    Vegetal Agents, Plant-Human Entanglements, and Julia Margaret Cameron’s Photography

    Vegetal Agents, Plant-Human Entanglements, and Julia Margaret Cameron’s Photography

    Emma and Christy look at Julia Margaret Cameron’s photograph 'Maud' (c. 1874) and discuss plant consciousness, agency, and erotics. In this episode, we cover tendrils and tentacles, Victorian queerness, plant horror, early ecologies, Darwin and plant sex, interspecies entanglements, photography and desire, colonial botany, tipitiwitchets, sadomasochism, and whether your houseplant can kill you.

    • 1 hr 4 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
13 Ratings

13 Ratings

Leoste92 ,

Frighteningly good

A true gem of a podcast that finds that perfect balance between a captivating conversation and thought-provoking research. It manages to keep focused on its main theme while being impressively versatile in its choice of subject. As fascinating as it is entertaining!

ArJa98 ,

A fab new find…

These episodes are so well researched and thought-out - there’s so many layers to each topic. The way the connections between art, science and popular culture are explored actually feels like a genuine conversation between friends, rather than a lecture.

Should’ve known it would be good, as they open with a Kim Petras song…

MJ1895 ,

Loved it!

Have just listened to the first episode of Drawing Blood and I’m so excited for the rest of the series! It’s super interesting and informative but also really entertaining - the hosts do a great job, really know their stuff, and they’re so much fun to listen to. If you like podcasts like Noble Blood you’ll love this - it’s just as entertaining and actually seems way better researched. Can’t wait for the next ep!

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