ABSTRACT

The body has become an increasingly significant concept in recent years and this Reader offers a stimulating overview of the main topics, perspectives and theories surrounding the issue. This broad consideration of the body presents an engagement with a range of social concerns, from the processes of racialization to the vagaries of fashion and performance art, enacted as surgery on the body. Individual sections cover issues such as:





  • the body and social (dis)order


  • bodies and identities


  • bodily norms


  • bodies in health and dis-ease


  • bodies and technologies.


Containing an extensive critical introduction, contributions from key figures such as Butler, Sedgwick, Martin Scheper-Huges, Haraway and Gilroy, and a series of introductions summarizing each section, this Reader offers students a valuable practical guide and a thorough grounding in the fascinating topic of the body.

chapter |42 pages

Introduction

part One|23 pages

What is a body?

chapter Chapter 1|5 pages

Refiguring Bodies

chapter Chapter 3|3 pages

The Burden and Blessing of Mortality

chapter Chapter 4|4 pages

Ethology: Spinoza and US

chapter Chapter 5|4 pages

Bodies That Matter

part Two|38 pages

Bodies and social (dis)order

chapter Chapter 6|5 pages

Techniques of the Body 1

chapter Chapter 7|4 pages

The Two Bodies

chapter Chapter 9|5 pages

Belief and the Body

chapter Chapter 11|4 pages

Civilization and Psychosomatics

chapter Chapter 12|5 pages

The Political Investment of the Body

part Three|39 pages

Bodies and identities

chapter Chapter 13|6 pages

Lesbian Bodies

Tribades, tomboys and tarts

chapter Chapter 14|2 pages

Thin is the Feminist Issue

chapter Chapter 15|5 pages

Ageing and Its Embodiment

chapter Chapter 16|7 pages

Divinity

A dossier, a performance piece, a little-understood emotion

chapter Chapter 17|6 pages

Ambivalent Femininities

chapter Chapter 18|5 pages

In Novel Conditions

The cross-dressing psychiatrist

chapter Chapter 19|4 pages

Endangered/Endangering

Schematic racism and white paranoia

part Four|49 pages

Normal bodies (or not)

chapter Chapter 21|5 pages

Measuring Heads

chapter Chapter 22|4 pages

The Body and the Archive

chapter Chapter 23|15 pages

Visualizing the Disabled Body

The classical nude and the fragmented torso

chapter Chapter 24|5 pages

Bodies, Disability and Spaces

The social model and disabling spatial organisations

chapter Chapter 25|7 pages

Monstrosity and the Monstrous

part Five|35 pages

Bodies in health and disease

chapter Chapter 26|5 pages

Complex Systems

chapter Chapter 27|4 pages

Portraits of People with AIDS

chapter Chapter 28|8 pages

The Global Traffic in Human Organs

chapter Chapter 29|3 pages

The Self Unmade

Embodied paranoia

chapter Chapter 30|11 pages

Hypochondriasis

The ironic disease

part Six|36 pages

Bodies and technologies

chapter Chapter 32|5 pages

The Biopolitics of Postmodern Bodies

Constitutions of self in immune system discourse

chapter Chapter 33|4 pages

The Pleasure of the Interface

chapter Chapter 34|5 pages

Race Ends Here

chapter Chapter 35|6 pages

Iatrogenesis

The Visible Human Project and the reproduction of life

chapter Chapter 36|5 pages

Twice Dead

Organ transplants and the reinvention of death

part Seven|33 pages

Bodies in consumer culture

chapter Chapter 37|6 pages

Soft-Soaping Empire

Commodity racism and imperial advertising

chapter Chapter 38|6 pages

The Finest Consumer Object

The body

chapter Chapter 39|5 pages

The Commercialization of Discipline

Keep-fit culture and its values

chapter Chapter 40|6 pages

The United Colors of Diversity

Essential and inessential culture

chapter Chapter 41|6 pages

Enterprising Kinship

Consumer choice and the new reproductive technologies

part Eight|26 pages

Body ethics

chapter Chapter 42|7 pages

‘Clay Cunningly Compounded’

chapter Chapter 43|4 pages

‘I Do Not Want to Look Like ...’

chapter Chapter 44|2 pages

Survival as a Social Construct

chapter Chapter 45|6 pages

The Body's Problems with Illness

chapter Chapter 46|3 pages

The Body in Pain

The making and unmaking of the world