What do nine-headed water serpents, microscopic pathogens, criminals, freak-show artists, and so many diverse communities of the other have in common? In various historical settings and contexts, they all have carried the label “monstrous,” sometimes as a result of unproven assumptions, a lack of scientific awareness, or purposeful demonization by figures of authority. What Makes A Monster?, held simultaneously in five library locations across the two USC campuses, examines preconceived notions about such monsters, and why they elicit responses across the emotional and physical, political and cultural spectrums.The exhibition features rare items from the USC Libraries Special Collections, such as Swiss natural scientist Ulisse Aldrovandi’s 1642 Monstrorum Historia and Reginald Scot’s 1584 The Discoverie of Witchcraft, alongside recently produced works such as a deck of serial killer “trading cards” and a Mayan altar with accompanying hexes “for the wandering male.”
Curators: Tyson Gaskill and Anne-Marie Maxwell
Body Scrub digital display: Kurosh ValaNejad
Exhibition concept: Margaret Wertheim
Exhibition design: Silvina Niepomniszcze
Construction expertise: Michael Maxwell
Special thanks for advice and loans of monstrous
material: Al Guerrero, Al Ridenour, Danny Roebuck,
Billy T. Smith, and Casey Wong