|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Written by leading social scientists working in and across a
variety of analytic traditions, this ambitious, insightful volume
explores interpretation as a focal metaphor for understanding the
body’s influence, meaning, and matter in society. Interpreting
body and embodiment in social movements, health and medicine, race,
sex and gender, globalization, colonialism, education, and other
contexts, the book’s chapters call into question
taken-for-granted ideas of where the self, the social world, and
the body begin and end. Encouraging reflection and opening new
perspectives on theories of the body that cut through the classic
mind/body divide, this is an important contribution to the
literature on the body.
Written by leading social scientists working in and across a
variety of analytic traditions, this ambitious, insightful volume
explores interpretation as a focal metaphor for understanding the
body’s influence, meaning, and matter in society. Interpreting
body and embodiment in social movements, health and medicine, race,
sex and gender, globalization, colonialism, education, and other
contexts, the book’s chapters call into question
taken-for-granted ideas of where the self, the social world, and
the body begin and end. Encouraging reflection and opening new
perspectives on theories of the body that cut through the classic
mind/body divide, this is an important contribution to the
literature on the body.
Bodies Unbound is a comparative study showing how ideologies of
gendered bodies shape medical care and the ways in which patients
respond to these ideologies through decisions about their bodies
using three cases: transgender men seeking preventative
gynecological care, cisgender men diagnosed with breast cancer, and
cisgender women with breast cancer who elect to undergo
prophylactic mastectomies. Bodies Unbound is a story about how the
relationship between bodies and gender becomes socially
intelligible as well as how medical professionals use their
position of relative authority over bodies to dictate which
combinations of bodies and genders are legitimate or not. Drawing
on the experiences of individuals whose bodies and gender
identities don't match medical and social expectations for
gynecological and breast cancer care, Sledge unravels the
taken-for-granted alignment of bodies and gender that provide the
foundation of medical care in the United States.Â
|
|