Structural violence is harm done to individuals or groups through the normalization of social inequalities in political-economic organization. Researchers working in both modern and prehistoric contexts focus on the lived experiences of individuals and the health disparities that arise from such violence. With this article, I seek to contribute to this literature by considering how skeletal evidence of dissection from the 19th-century United States reflects structural violence. I focus on "death experiences" and suggest that studies of structural violence must consider not only how inequality may be embodied as health disparities in the living but also "disembodiment" and the treatment and fate of the dead body. [bioarchaeology, dissection, autopsy, structural violence, United States] RESUMEN Violencia estructural es el daño hecho a individuos o grupos a través de la normalización de desigualdades sociales en una organización político-económica. Investigadores trabajando en contextos tanto modernos como prehistóricos se centran en las experiencias vividas por individuos y las disparidades en salud surgidas de tal violencia. Con este artículo, busco contribuir aésta literatura a través de considerar cómo evidencia esqueletal de disección del siglo XIX en los Estados Unidos refleja violencia estructural. Me enfoco en las "experiencias de muerte" y sugiero que estudios de violencia estructural deben considerar no sólo cómo la desigualdad puede ser corporizada como disparidades en salud en el viviente, sino también en "descorporización" y el tratamiento y destino del cuerpo muerto. [bioarqueología, disección, violencia estructural, Estados Unidos] S tructural violence is harm done to individuals or groups through the normalization of inequalities that are intimately, and invisibly, embedded in political-economic organization (Farmer et al. 2006). Research on modern groups (Farmer 2004;Farmer et al. 2006;Holmes 2013) and bioarchaeological skeletal collections (Harrod et al. 2012; Klaus 2012) that employ the concept of structural violence have focused on the lived experiences of individuals and the resulting health disparities. The former have considered the relationship between embedded social inequalities and chronic infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, while the latter have examined skeletal markers of systemic physiological stress (e.g., linear enamel hypoplasias, porotic hyperostosis) and traumatic injury. Here I focus on skeletal evidence of postmortem examination (i.e., dissection and