In his monumental book Peter Brown addresses the practice of permanent sexual renunciation--continence, celibacy, and life-long virginity--that developed in Christian circles from the first to the fifth centuries A.D. Brown vividly describes the early Christians and their strange, disturbing preo
Corporeality : The Body and Society
โ Scribed by Cassandra A. Ogden, Stephen Wakeman
- Publisher
- University of Chester Press
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 181
- Series
- Issues in the Social Sciences; 8
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Regardless of how a person spends her or his day, in a classroom, in work or outside employment, whatever our thoughts, beliefs and experiences of life, all living is embodied. We are of and within our bodies. During the last thirty years, social scientists have increasingly turned their attention to the body as a site of both theoretical engagement and empirical exploration. Recently, public discourse has also become preoccupied with embodied debates: the obesity crisis and the London 2012 Paralympics have located the body firmly in the realm of public interest. The new essays collected in Corporeality: The Body and Society demonstrate some of the unique advantages attainable through studying the body sociologically. Focusing in on a series of embodied fields related to lifestyle media, war, disability, drugs and mental health, the book re-states the fundamental importance of a body-centred approach in the social sciences. Work by established experts in the field sits side by side with new voices to provide an accessible and stimulating snap-shot of the role of the body in society in the early-twenty first century.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front cover
Title pages
Copyright page
Dedication
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Cassandra A. Ogden and Stephen Wakeman: Introduction - Corporeality: The body and society
Jayne Raisborough: Chapter One -Transforming fat bodies: Lifestyle media and corporeal responsibility
Elizabeth Ettorre: Chapter Two - Using women: Embodied deviance, pollution and reproductive regimes
Stephen Wakeman: Chapter Three - For an embodied sociology of drug use: Mephedrone and "Corporeal Pleasure"
Dan Goodley: Chapter Four - Why Critical disability studies?
Cassandra A. Ogden: Chapter Five - Surveillance of the leak child: No-body's normal but that doesn't stop us trying
Paul Higate: Chapter Six - Mercenary killer or embodied veteran? The case of Paul Slough and the Nisour Square Massacre
Michael S. Drake: Chapter Seven - Commemorating fatalities of war and national identity in the twenty-first century
Paul Taylor: Chapter Eight - Governing the body: The legal, administrative and discursive control of the psychiatric patient
Index
Back cover
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<div><i>Discipline and the Other Body</i> reveals the intimate relationship between violence and difference underlying modern governmental power and the human rights discourses that critique it. The comparative essays brought together in this collection show how, in using physical violence to discip
<div>A comparative historical and ethnographic perspective on corporeal violence, the body's emergence as a political entity in colonial and postcolonial governance, and the production of a discourse of human rights.</div>
<p>Bringing together two topics of wide and growing sociological interest, The Body, Childhood and Society examines how children's bodies are constructed in schools, families, courts, hospitals and in film. Recognising that children's bodies are a target for adult practices of social regulation, the
This book demonstates the extent to which establis hed ideas about the virus, the immune system, the HIV test and the epidemiology of the disease rely upon unexamined, conservative assumptions about sexual identity and sexual difference.