2004-12-06

Gynaecological Gizmo Exhibit Generates Giggle Factor

The Hall of Contraception.

Rows of cervical caps huddle like a little village of igloos. A wide array of condoms are near douches. The items are part of The History of Contraception Museum, which has become the newst addition to the Dittrick Medical History Center at Case Western Reserve University. The History of Contraception Exhibit is on display in the Cushing Room in the Allen Memorial Medical Library. The library is open Monday through Friday 8:30am-7:00pm, Saturday 9:00am-5:00pm and Sunday 1:00pm-6:00pm.
The library is on the second floor and the Dittrick Museum is on the third floor. The museum has different hours than the library.

More than 650 items make up what is described as the only collection of its kind in the world, representing the often creative practices and products devised in the hope of preventing unwanted pregnancies.

In ancient Egypt, crocodile dung was employed as a suppository before intercourse. Beaver-testicle tea was brewed by Canadian women, interested in prevention.

The collection includes some 350 intrauterine devices bearing such exotic names as the "Russian Cross," "Butterfly," Supercoil," "Sea Tangle Tent" and the ominous "10 Armed Device."

Percy Skuy, 72, of Toronto, a retired Canadian pharmacist, spent nearly 40 years assembling the museum. The items were largely donated by medical professionals and family planning services, or are re-creations of historical contraceptive devices.

Three years ago, Skuy started searching for a site that could offer a permanent home for the museum with sufficient staffing, public access and an educational/academic component.

James Edmonson, Dittrick's chief curator, said the History of Contraception Museum "embodies social history, ethical issues, medical concerns and womens' issues." Edmonson noted that the collection also has 150 reference books.

On the nonacademic side, Edmonson conceded there can be an initial "giggle factor."

He said the collection shows that people have been imagining means of conception for more than 2,000 years.

"It transcends society's religions and cultures," he said. "There's a universality about it that's intriguing."

1 comment:

Jen Jordan said...

I thought you boys would be all over this one. I guess, without visual aids, you don't find posts all that interesting (and yes, that is a dis... I doub;e dog dare you to post now!).