Steatopygia and the Modern Venus

Ahimsa Porter Sumchai MD
10 min readMar 19, 2023

Racism in Medical Science and the Sexualization of Black Beauty — by the author of The 21st Century Upright Woman

Neolithic Venus Figurine — approximately 10,000 years old. In every genetic variation of the human family, females tend to store fat around the breast, buttocks, hips and thighs. Steatopygia is the medical term for the accumulation of excessive fat in the buttocks region. It is an ancestral trait seen among the ancient people of South Africa — the Khoisan. Commonly known as Bushmen or San, it is seen as a sign of beauty and cultivated in early childhood.

Black Venus is a 2010 French film based on the life and times of Sarah Baartman. It received the Equal Opportunity Award at the 67th Venice International Film Festival that year. The film maintains a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Pygmies and Bushmen once inhabited the African continent “from the Gulf of Aden to the Cape of Good Hope”. For 22,000 years they were the largest group of humans on earth. DNA evidence identifies them as our closest existing link to our ancestral past. Enlightened medical scientists, historians and anthropologists recognize steatopygia as a common trait in early humans.

Steatopygia, from the Greek “steato” meaning fat and “pygia” meaning buttocks is a unique genetic feature seen in the ancient Khoisan people of southern Africa. In 2013 Chicago native Sarah Massey claimed to have the world’s biggest butt — measuring 7ft and requiring size 10XL pants.

Steatopygia is a human phenotype that results in the deposit of fat around the buttocks and hips extending to the thighs to form a thick layer reaching the knees. It is a widespread genetic trait of the Khoisan — commonly known as Bushmen. The trait is also found amongst the Pygmies of Central Africa and the Southeast Asians from the Andaman Islands. Steatopygia was common in early Homo Sapiens.

Cave paintings from Europe created 30,000 years ago display women with large buttocks. A 3,500 year old painted limestone from the 18th Dynasty reign of Queen Hatshepsut on display in the Cairo Antiquity Museum depicts the Queen of Punt on a visit to the Egyptian royal court with an enormous derreier.

“Paris 1816, the Royal Academy of Medicine…I have never seen a human head so similar to that of an ape. Standing by a moulded cast of Saartjie Baartman’s body, anatomist Georges Cuvier’s verdict is categorical.

Sarah Baartman was cruelly exploited in Europe and exhibited in a cage and in animal zoos as a freak show attraction because of her protruding buttocks. After her death her body was dissected and displayed for over 100 years in a Paris Museum. In 2002, at the request of newly elected South African President Nelson Mandela, Sarah Baartman returned to her motherland and was laid to rest.

In 1810 Saartjie left her native South Africa accompanied by Hendrik Cesars, who had displayed her at the Cape Town city hospital in exchange for cash. A Scottish military surgeon in the Cape slave lodge named Alexander Dunlop supplied showmen in Britain with exotic animal specimens. Dunlop urged Baartman to travel to Europe to make money exhibiting herself. The group lived together in the most expensive part of London — Duke Street, St. James.

“Free and enslaved at the same time, the Hottentot Venus became an icon in the slums, destined to be sacrificed in the pursuit of a shimmering vision of prosperity.”

“Stunt with your curls, your lips, Sarah Baartman hips, Gotta hop into my jeans like I hop into my whip, yeah!” Beyonce — “Black Effect” a track from the 2018 collaborative album “Everything is Love”

Ssehura - aka Saartjie (Sarah) Baartman, was a Khoikhoi woman born near the Gamtoos River in the Xhosa Kingdom of South Africa in 1789 who was exhibited as a freak show attraction in 19th century Europe as the Hottentot Venus. She is believed to be one of four women trafficked to Europe for white entertainment and exhibited for their steatopygic body types that became the subject of scientific debate, the outrage of abolitionists, the erotic projections of Victorian Europe…and the fashion craze of the 19th Century.

“The Hottentot Bustle” inspired a fashion accessory in Victorian Europes upper-class society. It replaced the hoop skirt to provide wealthy women with a desirable figure that exaggerated the curvature of the buttocks in England and France where H-shaped and block shaped buttocks are the most common phenotype.

Baartmans features were eroticized and described in advertisements as “the most correct and perfect specimen of her race.”

“La Belle Hotentote — 19th century French print of Sarah Baartman — British Museum

Baartman became the most famous “Hottentot Venus” due to the legal case brought on her behalf by the African Association that detailed key events in her life that remain in the public domain.

According to an affidavit supplied to the Court of King’s Bench British dated November 26, 1810, “Mr. Bullock of Liverpool Museum stated some months since a Mr. Alexander Dunlop, a surgeon in the army, came to him to sell the skin of a camelopard which he had bought from the Cape of Good Hope. Some time after, Mr. Dunlop again called on Mr. Bullock, and told him that he had on her way from the Cape, a female Hottentot, of very singular appearance; who would make the fortune of any person who showed her in London, and that he was under an engagement to send her back in two years.”

“Sartjee is 22 years old, is 4 feet 10 inches high, and has — for a Hottentot — a good capacity.”

A note on a flyer written by someone who saw her in London in 1811 includes language from the exhibition. The 1807 Slave Trade Act abolished the slave trade and a British abolitionist society — the African Association -sponsored a newspaper campaign describing the cage in which Baartman was exhibited and evidence she was being coerced. Marketed as the “missing link between man and beast”, in her 1810 London appearance Baartman wore a tight fitting garment, feathers and tribal ornaments. She did not appear nude.

The African Association filed a civil action at the Court of King’s Bench calling for the Attorney General to liberate her. On November 24, 1810 Baartman was questioned in Dutch, in which she was fluent, and according to a 2008 article in a British journal titled Race and Erasure:

“She stated that she in fact was not under restraint, had not been sexually abused and had come to London on her own free will. She also did not wish to return to her family and understood perfectly she was guaranteed half of the profits. The case was therefore dismissed. She was questioned for three hours. A written contract was produced considered to be a legal subterfuge.”

Painting of Sarah Baartman — Brittanica

In 1814 Baartman traveled to Paris where she was publicly displayed and became the subject of racially derogatory caricatures. She attracted the attention of Anatomist Georges Cuvier — famous for comparing racial types who viewed her as an example of a primitive human. Following the fall of Napoleon in 1814 France reigned in a highly conservative fashion and Baartman was sold to S. Reaux — an exhibitor and animal trainer. She was sexually abused by patrons “willing to pay for her defilement.” One year later she was dead.

Steatopygia and Science

The human butt interests me, as it does most people, but not because it symbolizes eroticism and sexual appeal. The most impressive analysis of the human derriere is the Smithsonian documentary Big Butts Loose Shoulders that scientifically analyzes the role of the buttocks as a pure running adaptation. The gluteus maximus is the largest muscle in the human body. It is a defining feature of the genus homo sapien.

Big Butts, Loose Shoulders, and Other Runner Adaptations

In the article The Human Spine is like a Precious Strand of Pearls, published in the Journal of Women’s Health Care in 2012, I expound on the evolution of the upright bipedal spine and the role it plays in low back pain and the lumbar spine degeneration evident in skeletal remains of human ancestors as old as Lucy.

Discovered in the Afar Region of Ethiopia in 1974, Lucy was short, had a small brain and gathered berries, nuts, insects and eggs from unguarded nests about 3.2 million years ago. Her most striking physical features are a valgus knee and a lumbar curve — signs of habitual bipedalism.

“Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” — the Beatles song that was playing in 1974 when American paleoanthropologist Donald Johanson and team uncovered Lucy’s remains. Celebrated for over 20 years as the “Ancestral Chronospecies” or earliest human ancestor, in 1992 the skull, mandible, pelvis and hands of the newest evolutionary debutante were unearthed. Ardi or Ardipithecus Ramidus is an ancestral female who walked upright over 5 million years ago.

If the question is whether there are evolutionary advantages to having a ginormous butt! The answer is yes.

Author Martin Oghigian answers the explosive question posed on the website Quora “why do black girls have bigger hips and booty than girls of other races?”

“They also tend to have larger breasts. This is largely because Africa was, and still is a hot place, and the more surface area on the body, the easier it is to expel heat. This is also the reason why Blacks tend to have longer arms and legs and smaller torsos. Conversely whites, especially northern whites have larger torsos, broader frames and shorter limbs making them more compact to conserve heat.”

Steatopygia — the storage of excessive calories as fat in the hips and butt creates a build in which fat is not confined to the gluteal region but extends to the outside and front of the thighs and tapers to the knee producing a curvaceous figure that clearly offers an evolutionary advantages in attracting a mate.

The accentuated lumbar lordosis — also called hyperlordosis or “swayback”- is a common variation in human anatomy in which the spine and pelvis are pushed forward creating a large curve in the back. Lordosis is associated with an increased prevalence of vertebral compression fractures, spinal degeneration and low back pain.

Black Girl Fly Magazine

A Hottentot Woman with Prominent Buttocks Due to an Abnormal Amount of Fat is an unframed art print created by an unknown artist in the Wellcome Collection. While it exaggerates the amount of steatopygia Sarah Baartman actually displayed it identifies that the buttock shape is not solely due to fat accumulation. The lumbar spine curves into a shelf at a near 90 degree angle accentuating the prominence of the derriere.

Baartman,Sarah A Hottentot Woman with Prominent Buttocks Due to an Abnormal Amount of Fat — Wellcome Collection

Sarah Baartman died on December 29, 1815 of undetermined causes. She was 27 years old. Within 24 hours of her death, police released her body to Georges Cuvier, a French naturalist and zoologist. According to Wikipedia, Cuvier conducted racial studies that provided the foundation for scientific racism, and published work on differences between racial groups physical and mental abilities. Cuvier subjected Sarah Baartman to examinations while held captive in a state of neglect.

“Cuvier’s dissection of Baartman helped shape European science and the theory that African women were savage and distinct from the “civilized females” of Europe.” Her skeleton, genitals and brain were displayed in the Paris’ Musee de l’Homme until 1974 as evidence of “her sexual primitivism and intellectual equality with that of an orangutan.”

Calls for the return of Sarah Baartman’s remains began in the 1940’s. A poem written by Diana Ferrus -a poet of Khoisan descent — entitled “I’ve come to take you home”, became the rallying cry for the movement to return Sarah Baartman to her South African motherland. The case garnered worldwide attention in the 1980’s with publication of the book The Hottentot Venus.

Following the victory of the African National Congress in the 1994 South African general election, President Nelson Mandela formally requested France return her remains. On March 6, 2002 the French National Assembly agreed to the request.

Ssehura returned to the Gamtoos Valley on May 6, 2002. She was buried on a hill in the Eastern Cape 200 years after her birth. A refuge for survivors of domestic violence, the Saartjie Baartman Centre for Women and Children, opened in Cape Town in 1999.

Sarah Baartman was buried on August 9, 2002 - Women’s Day - a public holiday in South Africa.

“I’ve come to take you home

I’ve come to take you home-home, remember the veld? the lush green grass beneath the big oak trees, the air is cool there and the sun does not burn.

I have made your bed at the foot of the hill, your blankets are covered in buchu and mint, the proteas stand in yellow and white and the water in the streat chuckle sing-songs as it hobbles along over little stones.

African sugarbird on protea flowers

I have come to wretch you away — away from the poking eyes of the man-made monster who lives in the dark with his clutches of imperialism who dissects your body bit by bit, who likens your soul to that of Satan and declares himself the ultimate god!

I have come to soothe your heavy heart, I offer my bosom to your weary soul, I will cover your face with the palms of my hands, I will run my lips over lines in your neck, I will feast my eyes on the beauty of you and I will sing for you…for I have come to bring you peace.

I have come to take you home, where the ancient mountains shout your name. I have made your bed at the foot of the hill, your blankets are covered in buchu and mint, the proteas stand in yellow and white —

I have come to take you home where I will sing for you

for you have brought me peace

for you have brought us peace

I’ve Come To Take You Home — Diana Ferrus Spoken Word

“The Works of Art Committee wants to point out that we recognise what happened to Sarah. We recognize the need to dignify her and commemorate her in more ways than one.”

Sarah Baartman Sculpture by Willie Bester — one of the most important artworks in the University of Cape Towns Ritchie Gallery is exhibited alongside an audio installation featuring the poem by Diana Ferrus — I’ve come to take you home, about the return of Baartman’s remains from the Musee de l’Homme to South Africa.

Dr. Ahimsa Porter Sumchai is author of The 21st Century Upright Woman — Low Back Pain and the Evolution of the Bipedal Spine. In 1981, Dr. Sumchai made history as the first African American woman to train in neurological surgery in the University of California system after being accepted in the Department of Neurological Surgery at both the University of California San Diego and the University of California at San Francisco.

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-21st-century-upright-woman-sumchai-ahimsa-porter/1123168413
Intern — Trauma Surgery Service San Francisco General Hospital June 1981 — Photo by Amelia Ashley Sun Reporter Newspaper

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Ahimsa Porter Sumchai MD

Founder, Director, PI - HP Biomonitoring/ Founding Chair- Radiological Committee Hunters Point Shipyard RAB 2001, Former Attending MD VA Toxic Registry & SFDPH