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With this book, a new field of inquiry is instantiated in folklore,
bodylore. Coming out of work in critical theory and cultural
studies, semiology and psychology, philosophy and communication,
literature and psychoanalysis, anthropology and history, Bodylore
investigates the bodily discourses and practices of various
cultures, including our own, in order to delineate the metaphysics
in terms of which we conceive and experience ourselves and others.
The body is disclosed as a cultural artifact rather than a natural
object, one invented and reinvented in and by its social
appearances. The term bodylore was coined for the 1989 meeting of
the American Folklore Society. It brings folkloristic concerns with
body language, body costumes and accoutrements, body movement,
discourses and representations of the body, body rituals and
taboos, and beliefs about the body to a social history of
embodiment.
Any woman who has been examined by a gynecologist could tell
Descartes a thing or two about the mind/body problem. Is her body
an object? Is it the self? Is it both, and if so, how? Katharine
Young takes up this problem in a book that looks at medicine's
means of separating self and body--and at the body's ways of
resisting. Disembodiment--rendering the body an object and the self
bodyless--is the foundational gesture of medicine. How, then, does
medical practice acknowledge the presence of the person in the
objectified body? Young considers in detail the "choreography" such
a maneuver requires--and the different turns it takes during a
routine exam, or surgery, or even an autopsy. Distinctions between
public and private, inside and outside, assume new meanings as
medical practice proceeds from one venue to the next--waiting room
to examining table, anteroom to operating theater, from the body's
exterior to its internal organs. Young inspects the management of
these and other "boundaries"--as a physician adds layers of
clothing and a patient removes layers, as the rules of objective
and subjective discourse shift, as notions of intimacy determine
the etiquette of exchanges between doctor and patient. From
embodied positions within the realm of medicine and disembodied
positions outside it, Young richly conveys the complexity of
presence in the flesh.
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