Interpreting The Body - Between Meaning and Matter (2023)
Interpreting The Body - Between Meaning and Matter (2023)
Interpreting The Body - Between Meaning and Matter (2023)
LENSES
IN
SOCIOLOGY
Interpreting
the Body
Between Meaning
and Matter
Edited by
Anne Marie Champagne
and Asia Friedman
Interpretive Lenses in Sociology
Series editors: Thomas DeGloma, Hunter College,
City University of New York, and Julie B. Wiest,
West Chester University of Pennsylvania
Interpreting Subcultures
Sense-Making From Insider and Outsider Perspectives
Editor J. Patrick Williams
The right of Anne Marie Champagne and Asia Friedman to be identified as editors of this work has
been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved: no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or
otherwise without the prior permission of Bristol University Press.
Every reasonable effort has been made to obtain permission to reproduce copyrighted material. If,
however, anyone knows of an oversight, please contact the publisher.
The statements and opinions contained within this publication are solely those of the editors and
contributors and not of the University of Bristol or Bristol University Press. The University of
Bristol and Bristol University Press disclaim responsibility for any injury to persons or property
resulting from any material published in this publication.
vii
Interpreting the Body
Index 238
viii
Series Editors’ Preface:
Interpretive Lenses in Sociology—
On the Multidimensional
Foundations of Meaning
in Social Life
Sociology is an interpretive endeavor.1 Whatever the approach taken to study
and explain an aspect of social life—qualitative or quantitative, micro or
macro—sociologists work to interpret their data to reveal previously unseen, or
to clarify previously misunderstood, social forces. However, within the broad
field of sociology, and under the purview of its kindred disciplines, there are
many scholars who work to unpack the deep structures and processes that
underlie the meanings of social life. These interpretive scholars focus on the
ways in which social meanings constitute the core structures of self and identity,
the ways that individuals negotiate meanings to define their shared situations,
and the collective meanings that bind people together into communities
while also setting any given group or context apart from others. From this
perspective, meaning underscores social mindsets and personal orientations in
the world, as well as the solidarities and divisions that define the dynamics and
mark the boundaries of our social standpoints and relationships. Furthermore,
such scholars are concerned not only with how the individuals and groups
they study actively make and remake the definitions that are central to their
lives, as well as how those understandings influence their behaviors, but also
how they seek to impact the world with their meaning-making processes. In
this regard, meaning is of paramount significance to both the extraordinary
moments and the routine circumstances of our lives.2
In their efforts to illuminate the deep social foundations of meaning, and
to detail the very real social, political, and moral consequences that stem
from the ways people define and know the world around them, interpretive
scholars explore the semiotic significance of social actions and interactions,
narratives and discourses, experiences and events. In contrast to those who
take a positivist or realist perspective and see the world—or, more precisely,
argue that the world can be known—in a more direct or literal light,3 they
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x
Interpretive Lenses in Sociology
various ways that help them to focus on and make sense of their experiences
as scholars. In other words, the process of interpretation comes alive in the
practice of research and, more particularly, in research situations that demand
a range of theoretical and methodological tools to illuminate and articulate
the social foundations of meaning central to the case at hand.6 Thus, over
the course of their work, scholars develop interpretive lenses that help them
find answers to the questions that drive them. While this may not come as
a surprise to many readers, we rarely interrogate or compare the nuances
of these lenses explicitly.
The purpose of this series is to interrogate, explore, and demonstrate the
various interpretive lenses that scholars use when they engage their areas of
interest, their cases, and their research situations. Each volume is centered
on a substantive topic (for example, religion, the body, or contentious
memories) or a particular interpretive-analytic method (for example,
semiotics or narrative analysis). The editors of each volume feature the work
of scholars who approach their central topic using different interpretive
lenses that are particularly relevant to that area of focus. They have asked each
author to explicitly illustrate and reflect on two dimensions of interpretation
in their work, and to explore the connections between them. First, they
asked authors to address how the individuals and communities they study
assign meanings and achieve shared understandings with regard to the core
topic of their volume. In doing so, authors address the social and cultural
forces at play in shaping how people understand their identities, experiences,
and situations, as well as how they frame their accounts, motivations, and
purposes while acting, communicating, and performing in the world.
Second, volume editors asked contributing authors to explicitly reflect
on their interpretive processes and approaches to unpacking the meanings
of the social phenomena they study. Some authors present new material
while others provide a reflexive overview of their research to date, but all
illustrate and discuss the work of interpretation and the central significance
of meaning. Such conscious reflection on our interpretive traditions and
lenses—on how they shape our analytic foci (in terms of what cases we
explore, at what levels of analysis, and with regard to which social actors) and
the ways we find meaning in our cases—can illuminate under-recognized
or unspoken choices we make in our work. Furthermore, it can expose
blind spots and suggest new frameworks for dialogue among scholars. This
reflexive dimension, along with the diversity of lenses featured together in
each volume, is what makes this series unique. In this vein, and to these
ends, we hope the volumes of this series will present arrays of interpretive
lenses that readers can use while working to make sense of their own cases
and to develop new perspectives of their own. In the process, we also
hope to advance the dialogue about interpretation and meaning in the
social sciences.
xi
Interpreting the Body
Thomas DeGloma
Hunter College and the Graduate Center, CUNY
Julie B. Wiest
West Chester University of Pennsylvania
xii
Interpretive Lenses in Sociology
Notes
1
An extended series introduction is available for open access download at: bristoluniversitypress.
co.uk/interpretive-lenses-in-sociology. Shorter and slightly modified versions appear as
prefaces to the different volumes of this series.
2
On the centrality of meaning in interpretive social analysis, see Reed’s (2011) important
work on interpretation and knowledge, especially his discussions of the “interpretive
epistemic mode” (pp 89–121) and the “normative epistemic mode” (pp 67–88).
3
See Reed (2011), especially on the “realist semiotic and the illusion of noninterpretation”
(p 52).
4
Indeed, this is what Clifford Geertz (1973) meant when he called for “thick description”
in ethnographic analysis.
5
Alfred Schütz (1932, pp 205–206; 1970, p 273) recognized the layers of interpretation
we point to here when he argued, “The thought objects constructed by the social
scientist … have to be founded upon the thought objects constructed by the common-
sense thinking of [people], living their daily life within their social world. Thus, the
constructs of the social sciences are, so to speak, constructs of the second degree, namely
constructs of the constructs made by the actors on the social scene.” Geertz (1973, p 9)
made a similar distinction when he argued “that what we call our data are really our
own constructions of other people’s constructions.” Also see Reed (2017, pp 29–31) on
“interpreting interpretations.” Such a distinction also informs the fundamental premises
of psychoanalysis, as the analyst is always in the business of interpreting interpretations
and unpacking layers of symbolism.
6
See also Tavory and Timmermans (2014), who advocate engaging the process of research
and interpretation armed with “multiple theoretical perspectives” (p 35).
References
Garland, D. (2006) ‘Concepts of culture in the sociology of punishment’,
Theoretical Criminology, 10(4): 419–447.
Geertz, C. (1973) The Interpretation of Cultures, New York: Basic Books.
Reed, I.A. (2011) Interpretation and Social Knowledge: On the Use of Theory in
the Human Sciences, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Reed, I.A. (2017) ‘On the very idea of cultural sociology’, in C.E. Benzecry,
M. Krause and I.A. Reed (eds) Social Theory Now, Chicago, IL: University
of Chicago Press, pp 18–41.
Schütz, A. (1932) The Phenomenology of the Social World, Evanston, IL:
Northwestern University Press, 1967.
Schütz, A. (1970) On Phenomenology and Social Relations, Chicago, IL:
University of Chicago Press.
Tavory, I. and Timmermans. S. (2014) Abductive Analysis: Theorizing
Qualitative Research, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
xiii
Notes on Contributors
xiv
Notes on Contributors
articles and book chapters. She has been the recipient of fellowships from
Fulbright-Hays, NIMH, the School for Advanced Research on the Human
Experience in Santa Fe, New Mexico, as well as the Guggenheim and
Rockefeller Foundations.
xv
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xvi
Notes on Contributors
xvii
Preface and Acknowledgments
The overarching theme of this volume grew out of The Roots and Branches
of Interpretive Sociology: Cultural, Pragmatist, and Psychosocial Approaches,
a conference organized and chaired by Thomas DeGloma and Julie B. Wiest
that took place over the course of two days immediately preceding the 2018
Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. The conference,
which was sponsored by the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction,
the Psychosocial Scholars Group, and Yale University’s Center for Cultural
Sociology, brought together scholars from across the globe working in
the traditions of American pragmatism, cultural and cognitive sociology,
psychoanalytic sociology, semiotics, symbolic interactionism, and other
schools of thought. The range of interpretive approaches represented in
the conference program offered a unique opportunity for investigating the
conjunctions and disjunctions between each tradition’s respective approach
to grasping the meaning and matter of social life.
Serving as a member of the Conference Programming Committee, Anne
Marie Champagne, a doctoral student and junior fellow at Yale University’s
Center for Cultural Sociology, co-organized (with Piper Sledge) a featured
thematic panel, The Fine Lines of Interpreting Bodies and Identities,
which set out to explore how bodies and embodied identities are presented,
represented, and interpreted in the social sciences. The panel title gave a nod
to Eviatar Zerubavel’s book The Fine Line: Making Distinctions in Everyday
Life (University of Chicago Press, 1991), a study of the sociomental processes
of differentiation, association, and perception that partition reality into
islands of meaning. Alongside panel presentations on auditory perception
and attributions of value (Whitney Johnson) and the embodied aesthetics of
far-r ight extremism (Cynthia Miller-Idriss), Asia Friedman, a former student
of Zerubavel, presented an overview of her research highlighting a cultural
cognitive vision for the social construction of the body. She specifically
emphasized selective attention as a key cultural cognitive process that links
meaning with materiality and plays a significant role in the social construction
of the body. Her cultural cognitive approach is reflected in this volume’s
broader focus on interpretation as a uniquely valuable approach for advancing
the study of the body as a simultaneously material and semiotic entity.
xviii
newgenprepdf
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Introduction:
Between Meaning and Matter
Anne Marie Champagne and Asia Friedman
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Interpreting the Body
which sought to objectively measure and quantify the observable world and
discover its regularities and causal connections, they also were the perceived
attributes of modernity itself (Weber, 1930; Giddens, 1991; Taylor, 1995).
Shaped by this historical milieu, early sociology drew from economics, law,
and even positivism to formulate its disciplinary methods (Durkheim, 1895;
Comte, 1975) as well as its concepts of social “action, choice, and goals”
(Turner, 1991, p 7). At the same time that sociology drew methodological
inspiration from positivism, it also sought to distinguish itself in opposition
to it, as a thoroughly social (contra physical) human science. This rejection
of the physical, Bryan Turner argues, left little interpretive room within
classical sociology for “the biological conditions of action or for the idea of
the ‘lived body’” (1991, p 7).
The durée of the early-to mid-twentieth century witnessed the growth
of sociology departments and programs in higher education, in addition
to professional associations and theoretical texts dedicated to the field. As
sociology developed and evolved in response to shifting historical contexts and
diversifying theoretical perspectives, the scope of its analytic lens expanded.
Branching off from economic models that viewed social action as arising
from rational choice, interpretively oriented perspectives considered the
symbols and values to which social action is keyed. Extending back to social
theorists Max Weber, Emile Durkheim, Georg Simmel, George Herbert
Mead, Talcott Parsons, Erving Goffman, Herbert Blumer, and others, this
interpretive branch of sociology sought to “penetrat[e]beyond … external
form” to access the “inner meaning of actions, events, and institutions”
(Alexander, 2003, pp 465–467). Yet this aim did not extend to the so-called
“brute facts” of the natural world. Physical matter, including the body,
continued to be viewed as unsociological—matter strictly “subject to the
empirical rules of biological science,” fixed, inert, and therefore impervious
to “the mutability and flux of cultural change” (Csordas, 1994, p 1).
Amid the ferment of shifting political, economic, cultural, technological,
and philosophical currents in the latter part of the twentieth century, the
naturalness, constancy, and materiality of the body were cast into doubt,
making the body available for new lines of inquiry and action. Among other
changes, the civil rights and women’s movements and the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973, which extended civil rights to persons with disabilities, called into
question what kinds of bodies matter and made the private body political
(Frank, 1990; Turner, 1991; Shilling, 2012). Medical and technological
advances, such as organ transplantation and in vitro fertilization, intensified
the commodification of body parts and increased awareness of the body’s
malleability (Crawford, 1984; Scheper-Hughes, 2001). The converging
forces of late-capitalist consumer culture, the health and beauty industries,
and mass media and marketing transformed the discipline and control of
ascetic attitudes toward the body into the embodied practices of self-care,
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Interpreting the Body
serves as the ontological ground of the body. The notion that the body defies
definition because it is always gesturing beyond itself is evocative of the
current of play, plasticity, and the possibility for resistance that characterizes
deconstructionist and postmodernist perspectives. Emphasizing the highly
mediated, individualized, contradictory, and therefore open and undecidable
nature of social reality, deconstructionism and other postmodern perspectives
prioritize individual agency, experience, interpretation, and knowledge over
suprastructural forces and systems of relations (Rosenau, 2015).
In emphasizing individual agency and the undecidability of meaning,
post-structuralist, deconstructionist, and postmodern perspectives
effectively challenge the naturalization of binary hierarchies underlying
Western philosophy and classical social theory (mind/body, immaterial/
material, masculine/feminine, rational/emotional, civilized/primitive), yet
critics have rightly pointed out the bodily blind spot of such perspectives;
they overwhelmingly focus on language and discourse without applying
constructionist perspectives to the “fleshy” matter of bodies themselves
(Prosser, 1998; Witz, 2000; Epstein, 2002; Barad, 2007; Alaimo and Heckman,
2008; Pitts-Taylor, 2016b). Feminist materialisms (or neomaterialisms), for
example, have offered a particularly powerful critique of dematerialized
understandings of the body in feminist thought, aiming to readdress the
physical body but without totally abandoning the insights offered by cultural
constructionism and postmodernism (Alaimo and Hekman, 2008, pp 1–6).
The “coconstitution of nature and culture” (Pitts-Taylor, 2016a, p 10) is
taken as the starting point of feminist materialism, but materiality is explicitly
understood “not simply in social-structural but also in physical, biological,
and natural terms” (Pitts-Taylor, 2016b, p 10). Additionally, there is an
emphasis on reconceptualizing agency to include material agency, “to find
a way to talk about the body as itself an active, sometimes recalcitrant, force”
(Alaimo and Heckman, 2008, p 4). It is argued that without this ability,
feminism and social-scientific scholarship will fail to meaningfully address
“lived experience, corporeal practice, or biological substance” or effectively
“engage with medicine or science in innovative, productive, or affirmative
ways” (p 4). Attending to material agency means grappling with bodily
differences and how material specificity matters—influencing both how
social representations shape the experience of the body and how the body
is able to determine its social representations (Pitts-Taylor, 2008, pp 25–26).
Materiality, Victoria Pitts-Taylor notes, is always “specifically enacted in
actual and differentiating conditions and contexts” (2016b, p 11) and is thus
inextricable from and mutually constitutive of power and privilege.
Although we are persuaded by these critiques, we also find that most lack
a clear analytic framework for moving beyond the limitations of discursive
perspectives without lapsing into simplistic materialism. Some researchers
borrow theoretical frameworks from other disciplines, such as quantum
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can be readily exported. Highlighting this, while at the same time being
careful not to essentialize Anlo-Ewe ways of knowing, Geurts and Komabu-
Pomeyie foreground the dynamic interweaving of psychosocial, interactive-
emergent, and collective-formative interpretive frameworks that underpin the
sociophysiological meanings of seselelãme. They also employ and refer to these
frameworks to interrogate the institutional and geopolitical asymmetries in
interpretive authority and communicative power that can have polluting
and far-reaching material-symbolic consequences.
Focusing on interpretations of gendered and raced bodies in the context of
colonialism, in Chapter 4, “Gender on the Post-Colony: Phenomenology,
Race, and the Body in Nervous Conditions,” Sweta Rajan-Rankin and
Mrinalini Greedharry supplement Frantz Fanon’s phenomenal-psychoanalytic
perspective on racism and Black consciousness with postcolonial feminist
and gender theory to present an intersectional close reading of Tsitsi
Dangarembga’s novel Nervous Conditions. Fanon’s phenomenology, which
centers on Black men’s bodies, does not adequately theorize how gender
and race are “a product of colonial ambitions to categorize, tame, discipline,
and shape the colonized body.” Rajan-Rankin and Greedharry thus frame
“the problem of being a colonized woman” as being “constantly under
erasure between gender and race.” The physical body, they argue, “must
disappear in order to resolve the tensions of colonized womanhood.” Using
Dangarembga’s novel as an “organic theory of the native woman’s body,” they
analyze “how African womanhood is negotiated and how girls’ bodies are
made available for, and find ways to resist, colonial architectures of power.”
Their analysis demands attention to the material specificity of bodies. Since
the physical characteristics of bodies are never neutral but always interpreted
through and taken up in social dynamics of power, the material specificity
of the body matters for how one is perceived and for the kinds of social
worlds different materialities make possible and preclude. In addition to their
intersectional phenomenological approach, Rajan-Rankin and Greedharry’s
analysis incorporates an interactive-emergent framework for meaning, as
illustrated, for one, in the way that the characters Tambu and Nyasha both
experience their bodily pleasures as structured by family interactions rooted
in social relations of race, gender, and colonialism.
In Chapter 5, “Reinterpreting Male Bodies and Health in Crisis
Times: From ‘Obesity’ to Bigger Matters,” Lee F. Monaghan takes a
collective-formative approach to the male “obesity crisis,” challenging
medicalized “obesity epidemic” interpretive frameworks and the use of
“health” discourse as a means of controlling socially deviant bodies. These
social discourses of “obesity alarmism” largely focus on individual behavior
change. Yet, as medical sociologists have demonstrated, individual health
behaviors play very little role in health inequalities, which are largely
macrostructural in nature, situated in the nested social-structural and
10
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Interpreting the Body
aware of and experience the “True Self.” This “theology of the body,”
Johnston notes, is conveyed through the yoga teachers’ verbal directions. She
describes how, for instance, early in her participant observation as a teacher
trainee, she did not recognize certain embodied experiences as moments
of experiencing her “True Self ” because she was not yet equipped with
the correct language or conceptual framework for interpreting the somatic
experience. Johnston argues that talk, as a form of interaction in situ, links the
body to broader symbolic systems of interpretation, thereby enabling certain
kinds of embodied experiences and the transmission of shared interpretive
frameworks for making sense of them.
With a focus on race and gender in educational settings, in Chapter 8,
“Black Girls’ Bodies and Belonging in the Classroom,” Brittney Miles
likewise calls for bridging collective-formative and interactive-emergent
perspectives on interpreting the body. Highlighting a range of inherited
misogynist and anti-Black discourses, by way of which the meanings
of Black girls’ bodies are read and misread, Miles shows how these
interpretive frameworks are centrally implicated in the reproduction of
structural relations of inequality in schools. She specifically examines
teachers’ misinterpretations of Black female students’ voice and body work.
Exploring Black talk, sass, loudness and quietness, and focusing on dress
and appearance in schools, she illustrates both how dominant racialized and
gendered discourses emerge interactionally and how interaction can take the
form of “embodied reverse discourse,” a bodily practice of reappropriation
that shifts meanings of gender and race, opening “conceptual space for the
production of discursive counternarratives.” While the body’s meaning
derives in tension, in the oppositional space between dominant and counter
discourse, Miles acknowledges that collective-f ormative discourses, which hold
more institutional authority, continually “work their way through microlevel
interactions.” Yet directing attention to the “interactional maneuverability”
that enables embodied reverse discourse to emerge also “allows us to
consider how Black girls’ bodily negotiations may be understood differently
when interpreted from their own perspective.” Miles argues that symbolic
interactionism provides a useful theoretical framework for recognizing these
alternate interpretations and interactional shifts in sensemaking while still
attending to dominant meanings.
“Our manner of making sense often impacts our sense experience,” writes
Chandra Russo in Chapter 9, “Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
with Solidarity Activists.” Reflecting on her experience as an observer-
participant involved in solidarity witnessing, a form of political protest in
which activists collectively engage in physically demanding, vulnerabilizing
strategies of resistance to raise awareness around issues of state violence, she
considers how the interpretive interplay between affect, emotion, and culture
underlying embodied vulnerability “becomes ... meaningful to the task of
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References
Alaimo, S. and Hekman, S. (2008) ‘Introduction: emerging models of
materiality in feminist theory’, in S. Alaimo and S. Hekman (eds) Material
Feminisms, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp 1–19.
Alexander, J.C. (2003) The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology,
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Alexander, J.C. and Smith, P. (2003) ‘The Strong Program in cultural
sociology: elements of a structural hermeneutics’, in J.C. Alexander (auth)
The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology, Oxford: Oxford University
Press, pp 11–26.
Banaji, M.R. and Greenwald, A.G. (2013) Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good
People, New York: Delacorte Press.
Barad, K. (2007) Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the
Entanglement of Matter and Meaning, Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Blumer, H. (1986) Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method, Berkeley:
University of California Press.
Bordo, S. (1993) Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body,
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Bourdieu, P. (1977) Outline of a Theory of Practice, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2013.
Brekhus, W.H., Brunsma, D.L., Platts, T. and Dua, P. (2010) ‘On the
contributions of cognitive sociology to the sociological study of race’,
Sociology Compass, 4(1): 61–76.
Butler, J. (1990) Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity,
New York: Routledge, 2010.
Butler, J. (1993) Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of ‘Sex’,
New York: Routledge, 2011.
Chodorow, N.J. (1989) Feminism and Psychoanalytic Theory, New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press.
Comte, A. (1975) Auguste Comte and Positivism: The Essential Writings, edited
by G. Lenzer, Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
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Frank, A.W. (1990) ‘Bringing bodies back in: a decade review’, Theory,
Culture and Society, 7(1): 131–162.
Friedman, A. (2013) Blind to Sameness: Sexpectations and the Social Construction
of Male and Female Bodies, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Friedman, A. (2016) ‘“There are two people at work that I’m fairly certain
are Black”: uncertainty and deliberative thinking in blind race attribution’,
The Sociological Quarterly, 57(3): 437–461.
Fuchs, T. (2017) ‘Intercorporeality and interaffectivity’, in C. Meyer, J.
Streeck and J.S. Jordan (eds) Intercorporeality: Emerging Socialities in Interaction,
Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp 3–24.
Giddens, A. (1991) Modernity and Self-Identity, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Gimlin, D (2002) Body Work: Beauty and Self-Image in American Culture,
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Goffman, E. (1959) The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, New York:
Anchor Books.
Goffman, E. (1974) Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience,
Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press, 1986.
Goldenberg, N.R. (1990) Returning Words to Flesh: Feminism, Psychoanalysis,
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Hochschild, A.R. (1983) The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human
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Jordan-Young, R. (2010) Brain Storm: The Flaws in the Science of Sex
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Laqueur, T. (1990) Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud,
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Latour, B. (2005) Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-
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Lizardo, O., Mowry, R., Sepulvado, B. et al (2016) ‘What are dual process
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Lorber, J. (1994) Paradoxes of Gender, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Lorber, J and Moore, L.J. (2007) Gendered Bodies, Feminist Perspectives, Los
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Mead, G.H. (1934) Mind, Self and Society from the Standpoint of a Social
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Young, I.M. (2005) On Female Body Experience: ‘Throwing Like a Girl’ and
Other Essays, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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18
1
For the task of intellectuals is not only to explain the world; they
must interpret it as well.
—Jeffrey C. Alexander, The Meanings of Social Life:
A Cultural Sociology
Formerly noteworthy for its muted absence from sociological theory, the
body with which contemporary theory concerns itself is no less remarkable
despite it no longer being silent or absent (Williams and Bendelow,
1998; Shilling, 2012). Since the corporeal turn in sociology in the 1980s,
considerable attention has been given to body studies across multiple
academic disciplines within the humanities and social sciences (Shilling,
2016). As with other epistemic shifts, this turn has led to a proliferation
of approaches to understanding the social ontology of the body and its
constitutive role in the embodiment and production of social life and the self.
Many of these approaches—including, among others, the culturally pragmatic
(see Champagne, 2018; Broch, 2020),1 phenomenological (see Merleau-P onty,
1945; Leder, 1990; Csordas, 1994; Young, 2005), interactionist (see Waskul
and Vannini, 2006), and praxeological (see Goffman, 1959; Garfinkel, 1967;
Bourdieu, 1977; Foucault, 1978b; Butler, 1990)—highlight the body’s
embedment in symbolic horizons of meaning.2 Yet, in spite of sharing a
common interest in the cultural dimensions of the body and embodiment,
there is scarcely agreement among scholars working within these traditions
about what culture is (is it a fairly stable system of shared meanings or an
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20
Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
and interpretation to draw out their implications for interpreting the body
and embodiment.
21
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22
Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
2005). To approach either culture or the body as anything other than the
incidental tools and products of rational actors and institutions would
have been anathematic to the scientific logic of the discipline. Shoring up
sociology’s disciplinary borders therefore included defending them against
the profanation of “unsociological” approaches. To study meaning, feeling,
and the body-subject as formative social forces in their own right was
tantamount to polluting and disordering the discipline.
What changed? Explanations of the turn in the late twentieth century to
culture and the body emphasize sociopolitical, economic, and cultural shifts
in modes of production, consumption, and identity construction. Among the
drivers of these changes, scholars frequently cite postindustrialization, late
capitalism, and globalization (Robertson, 1988; Jameson, 1991; Martin, 1992;
Turner, 2008); commercialization, digitalization, and the rise of consumer
culture (Featherstone, 2007; cf Woodward, 2012); second-wave feminism
(Turner, 1992, 2008); and the linguistic turn (Alexander and Smith, 2003).
Underscoring the symbolic basis of economic-cum-social action, these
interpretive shifts precipitated new conceptualizations of subjectivity and the
body that undermined Marxian materialist critiques of ideology that specified
culture narrowly in terms of class and political interests (see Robertson,
1988; Haraway, 1994; Turner, 1995; Alexander, 2003; Featherstone, 2007).
Reconfiguring the relationships between technology, economy, and the self,
these theoretical shifts expanded sociology’s disciplinary canopy while also
calling the generalizing tendency of modern social theory into doubt. While
the scope of this chapter prevents me from elaborating these shifts, more
germane to the thematization of culture and the body within sociology is
their shared challenge of having to contend with the conflicting intellectual
“impulses” (Frank, 1991) or “moods” (Lyotard, 1984) of the modern and
postmodern (cf Featherstone, 1989). To assert the possibility of a strong
cultural sociology of the body, we must first assay certain key fractures and
conjunctions between modern and postmodern thought—for the recovery of
the body and culture in contemporary sociology, as well as the development
thereafter of SPCS, presents, each in its own way, a countercurrent to and/or
a reconfiguration of the foundational logics of the modern and postmodern.
23
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24
Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
and the “acts which constitute its reality” (Butler, 1990, p 185). Neither
reducible to the mind nor to nature, neither exclusively a subject nor an
object, the social self is an embodied being in the world (Merleau-Ponty,
1945), a situation (de Beauvoir, 1949) experienced and enacted in a given
context and therefore constrained but not entirely determined by an array of
guided doings (Merleau-Ponty, 1945; Goffman, 1974). Inseparable from the
material world, the socially constructed self implicates an altogether different
metaphysics, one in which self and body, being the co-constitutive products
of an ongoing achievement (Garfinkel, 1967), are inherently malleable and
multiple yet ontologically durable—the perfect nexus for self-cultivation
through bodily practices, interactions, and projects (Gimlin, 2002), which,
although sometimes personal and idiosyncratic, remain accountable to
collective interpretation.
In addition to facilitating the thematization of the body as a social fact
worthy of study, constructivist inquiry into how one becomes a socially
embodied self insinuated culture’s involvement. Given early sociology’s
general relegation of culture to the purportedly nondeterminative sides
of the material–ideal and objective–subjective dualisms of the time, the
postmodern impulse toward fragmentation that had spurred new questions
about subject formation and the body also reinvigorated interest in
the symbolic dimensions of social life. Extending beyond the confines
of language and discourse, explorations into the culture structures
underpinning self and society began to reconsider the material (physical,
empirical, economic, etc) elements of meaning-making, especially with
respect to how individual meanings become collectively shared facticities
and thus “an essential part” of the description, interpretation, explanation,
and materialization of “social facts” (see Berger and Luckmann, 1966, p 18;
Reed, 2011, p 2).
This more reflexive examination of how culture operates on and through
(and can even formulate) material forces amounted not so much to a
nostalgic backlash against postmodernism as it did a neo-modern effort to
overcome the material–ideal divide (Robertson, 1988; Alexander, 2003).
Marking what some have dubbed “the cultural turn,” social scientists involved
in this effort sought to demonstrate the constitutive role of culture in all
domains of social life (Alexander and Smith, 2003). Doing so called for
liberating the internal, ideational dimension of social action from economic
determinism and moral equivalency without reinstating an overly macro-
social, integrationist, or micro-social, voluntaristic, view of social cohesion
(Robertson, 1988; Alexander, 2003; Featherstone, 2007; Susen, 2015;
Simko and Olick, 2021). For SPCS in particular, this meant reasserting, à la
Durkheim, the understanding that society expresses an observable, concrete,
living reality—a living reality constructed from categories of experience and
thought that filter, represent, and activate underlying social relations and
25
Interpreting the Body
which take part in the ideas and symbols individuals use to describe those
relations (see Durkheim, 1915, pp 17–19; Alexander and Smith, 2003).
If the objects and interpretive conceptual tissues that comprise collective
human experience appear to be mere illusion, as the postmodernists and
post-structuralists assert, it is not because there is no there there. Rather,
it is because “to the immediate data given by the senses” something extra
is added, and that something is the psychical force of moral sentiment and
feeling that we draft from the society in which we live (Durkheim, 1915,
pp 203, 225–226, 348).
At the heart of Durkheim’s conception of culture lies an interdependent
relationship between individual and society mediated by material objects.
Individuals give expression to ideas and experience by “fix[ing] them
upon material things which symbolize them” (Durkheim, 1915, p 228).
Subjectively, these ideas and experiences may be idiosyncratic. However,
if they are to be shareable, they must necessarily connect to the shared
categories of meaning upon which social life is organized (Durkheim,
1915; Mead, 1934; Alexander, 2003). The perdurance of society depends
upon this very process of signification. If not for the materialization of
signs and institutions—those “entities that don’t sleep” (Latour, 2005,
p 70)—individuals would have to assemble the common ground of
social sentiment anew, from scratch, moment to moment, interaction
to interaction. This would hardly be efficient or conducive to the social
coordination of meanings necessary to support complex collective
organization and action. The process of signification that takes place
through the interrelationship of individuals, objects, and background
representations allows us to quickly reassemble the social in our daily
interactions, give it material form, and circulate it beyond ourselves, so
that, in transcending both time and place, we feel its enduring structure
as something living, natural … real.
The symbolic foundation of society that Durkheim illuminates in
Elementary Forms is a central feature of the Strong Program in cultural
sociology. If society is a web of crystalized relations between material
things (signifying surfaces) and collective sentiments (discursive depths),
then culture is the skein from which that web and bodies are woven (see
Durkheim, 1915; Alexander, 2003; Reed, 2011). Furthermore, each
“crystallization” within this web presents not an object—or the body—a s such
but an articulation of our interpretive “grasp on the world,” aka “situation”
(de Beauvoir, 1949, p 68). The task of the cultural sociologist is to tease out
this skein to reveal the interpretive-symbolic connections that structure and
support every articulation of social life, including the conditions of body
and embodiment that make articulation possible. It is with this charge in
mind that I propose the possibility of developing a strong cultural sociology
of the body and embodiment.
26
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Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
body and bodily action are what give the body its moral weight. Material
affordances and technology may, like culture itself, enable or constrain bodily
agency, but, as Bordo notes, a white female celebrity’s cornrows and a Black
woman’s hair straightening are not equivalent practices. She writes, “When
Oprah Winfrey admitted … that all her life she has desperately longed to
have ‘hair that swings from side to side’ … she revealed the power of racial
as well as gender normalization, normalization not only to ‘femininity,’ but
to the Caucasian standards of beauty” (p 49).
To heed Bordo’s critique is to recognize that relations of power congeal
between poles of meaning, which themselves delimit potential lines or poles
of action (Merleau-P onty, 1945). What is more, these meaning structures are
often hidden beneath the surface of witnessable practices. Thus the cultural
sociologist of the body must use the tools of interpretation to excavate the
cultural forms of moral sentiment that bring us from sheer corporeality
(body) to lived corporeality (embodiment), to that which is enfleshed rather
than simply inflected with meaning.
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32
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Interpreting the Body
When Holly says “that that’s not a big deal [to him],” she is referring to the
absence of her breasts. What makes this embodied encounter particularly
“heartwarming” is that it retains and reinforces, for Holly and her son, the
familiarity of a premastectomy bonding ritual and its attendant meanings.
That Holly’s nonreconstructed chest has retained an element of its original
softness creates a sensuous, mimetic, material and therefore durable link
between Holly’s former healthy breast and her currently mastectomized
chest. It therefore permits, under new material conditions, the reconvening
of some of the deeper meanings of wellness previously articulated by the
reversable arrangement held between a soft material surface, the breast, and
ideas of feminine wholeness. Here, meaning is restored not by recreating a
breast mound but by reconnecting embodied experience (a part) to deeper
meanings established over time (a whole). This is a distinctively hermeneutic,
interpretive process, one that strictly pragmatic approaches to the body are
ill-equipped to explain.
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Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment
intrinsic to things themselves, but it also does not emerge from the irruption
of either material or gestural matter upon the senses (see Mead, 1934; Latour,
2005, p 80). Actions are meaningful only when they find anchorage in a shared
symbolic system, such as a common discourse. Meaning, therefore, is neither
an “hallucinatory effect” of repetition (Butler, 1990) nor the perceptibility of
deviation from a mean (Canguilhem, 1978; Foucault, 1999). As Durkheim
reminds us, neither the habitual rising and setting of the sun nor its occasional
eclipse can account for the religious feeling of awe or the myths we impute to it
(1915, pp 28–29, 84). By way of analogy, it is not the appearance of performative
regularity (or irregularity) or the presence of material affordances that account
for the body’s significance but rather the horizons of meaning within which
these perceptual phenomena are embedded and through and out of which the
lived body is constructed (Butler, 1993; Champagne, 2018).
The meanings and personalities that the “imagination place[s]behind
things” (Durkheim, 1915, p 77) are enabled by the collective representations of
culture. These representations allow us to connect “from within the confines
of the skin to what lies beyond [as well as within our] bodily frame” (Dewey,
1934, p 13). As both matter and idea, the body comprises a fundamental
medium through which we are brought into direct, interpretive contact
with the conceptual tissues and material anchors that hold meaning in place.
Through the surfaces of the body, we connect culture to sensuous form and
sensuous form to culture, not only praxically or through ratiocination alone
but, more durably, by way of sense, feeling, emotion, affect, imagination,
and symbolization—the very personal means of mind–body connection that
undergird our individual and collective representations.
If, as Alexander asserts, “interpreting is a way of positioning, of saying who
we are” (2008, p 158), then it may be said that the lived body, in calling out
to itself, actively participates in its own meaning-making, and in so doing
helps each of us to formulate our own maximal interpretations of the self and
society. As the nexus of self and world, body and embodiment are already
thick with meaning. So it is the task of the strong cultural sociologist to
draw equally thick, maximal interpretations of the culture structures that
give body and embodiment their significance.
Conclusion
In this chapter I advance the possibility of developing a meaning-centered,
strong cultural sociology of the body and embodiment, one that approaches
body and embodiment as constituting a uniquely hermeneutical situation—a
fusion of subject and object, ideality and materiality—structured by cultural
codes and dependent upon interpretation for getting itself out into the social
world. Tracing the thematization of culture and the body along the modern,
postmodern, and neo-modern analytical impulses (or moods) that are still
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Notes
1
For a full discussion of cultural pragmatics as a macro-sociological model of social action
qua cultural performance, see Alexander (2004).
2
In this paper I use the term praxeological to distinguish perspectives of subject
formation that emphasize the role of practices worked on or through the body (eg,
disciplines, displays, doings, performances) from those that emphasize meaning-making
or interpretation.
3
Philosopher David Black argues that motives, which we tend to think of in the value-
neutral terms of cause and effect, are mitigated by underlying motifs (narrative patterns,
themes, and metaphors) that “not only move[ ] us from one moral place to the next, but
also create the moral places we move among” (1994, p 361). In contrast to motivation,
which supposes an instrumental, means–ends relationship to action, motifaction refers
to a narrativistic orientational power that directs action.
4
The professionalization of sociology as a nomothetic science directed toward policy is
due in part to the pragmatic and statistical traditions of, respectively, the Chicago School
and Columbia University (see Calhoun et al, 2009).
5
See Turner’s (1992, p 33) discussion of Weber, Pareto, and Parsons and the interaction
between sociology and economics.
6
Bodies coded male/masculine were associated with the morally elevated Apollonian
characteristics of objectivity, rationality, form, and order, whereas bodies coded female/
feminine were associated with the morally abased Dionysian characteristics of subjectivity,
emotion, formless content, and disorder (see Nietzsche, 1993; Grosz, 1994).
7
See Alexander and Smith (2010) contra Stoltz (2021). If, as Stoltz argues, representational
signs do not derive their meaning in opposition to other signs, then culture may still
exercise relative autonomy from other social structures, just not vis-à-vis a system of
binary oppositions.
8
Consider that on a number line there exists between 0 and 1 an infinite number of
divisions—divisions that are locatable by their proximity to and distance from the flanking
integers. Similarly, the proliferation of identifiable genders in the American context occurs
38
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References
Alexander, J.C. (2003) The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology,
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Alexander, J.C. (2004) ‘Cultural pragmatics: social performance between
ritual and strategy’, Sociological Theory, 22(4): 527–573.
Alexander, J.C. (2008) ‘Geertz and the Strong Program: the human sciences
and cultural sociology’, Cultural Sociology, 2(2): 157–168.
Alexander, J.C. (2010) ‘Iconic consciousness: the material feeling of
meaning’, Thesis Eleven, 103(1): 10–25.
Alexander, J.C. and Smith, P. (2003) ‘The Strong Program in cultural
sociology: elements of a structural hermeneutics’, in J.C. Alexander (auth)
The Meanings of Social Life: A Cultural Sociology, Oxford: Oxford University
Press, pp 11–26.
Alexander, J.C. and Smith, P. (2010) ‘The Strong Program: origins,
achievements, and prospects’, in J.R. Hall, L. Grindstaff and M. Lo (eds)
Handbook of Cultural Sociology, London: Routledge, pp 13–24.
Barthes, R. (1957) ‘Myth today’, in R. Barthes (auth) Mythologies, translated
by R. Howard and A. Lavers, New York: Hill and Wang, 2013, pp 215–274.
Barthes, R. (1964) Elements of Semiology, translated by A. Lavers and C.
Smith, New York: Hill and Wang, 1977.
Barthes, R. (1977) Image, Music, Text, translated by S. Heath, New York: Hill
and Wang.
Berger, P.L. and Luckmann, T. (1966) The Social Construction of Reality: A
Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge, New York: Anchor Books.
Black, D.W. (1994) ‘Rhetoric and the narration of conscience’, Philosophy
and Rhetoric, 27(4): 359–373.
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43
2
What are you made of? Look at your hands. Draw one palm across
the other. Feel the density of your tissues, the bones, musculature,
and sinuous ligaments. What gives your tissues substance and
form? You have probably been told that your body is composed
of trillions of living cells. But what are your cells made of? What
is the stuff of life?
—Natasha Myers, Rendering Life Molecular
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Interpreting the Body
populations, which are necessarily social and often racial in nature. DNA
thus does not cause or define racial identity any more than it is caused and
defined by social processes of racialization. In human genome diversity
research, faith in “molecular origins” refers back to “ancestral populations,”
which are themselves defined via contemporary “reference populations”
(TallBear, 2013, pp 5–6). As a result, “each of those constitutive elements
operates within a loop of circular reasoning,” inasmuch as the categories into
which genes are sorted are themselves defined by reference to socially and
historically grouped populations. While the rhetoric of DNA assumes that
it grounds populations in materiality, the process of genetic analysis is itself
also grounded in stories about peoples.
DNA is thus “material-semiotic” insofar as it is both “supported by and
threads back into the social-historical fabric to (re)constitute the categories
and narratives by which we order life” (TallBear, 2013, p 7). Moreover, “as
DNA is increasingly called upon to speak to questions of racialized and
exclusionary citizenship and belonging, understanding genetic ancestry
as a multivalent political object could not be more important” (Tamarkin,
2020, p 14). Following such analyses, we must conclude that DNA is not
simply the “stuff of life,” out of which racial, ethnic, national, and citizen
identities are constructed; it is also constructed out of racial imaginaries
and linked to genetic markers by unmarked but hegemonically white
disciplinary histories. What kind of molecule is this, then? On the one
hand, DNA is undeniably a molecule of identity, a material particle that not
only represents but also concretely transmits identity and links individuals
together in a way that is not just social. On the other hand, it is also a
molecule of technique, a socially constructed unit that becomes available only
through the enactment of “repeatable pathways” or disciplinary knowledge
(Spatz, 2015, p 44), in this case of both social history and technoscientific
biochemistry. If my previous work on technique attempted to show how
identity is made of technique—“what we know becomes who we are” (Spatz,
2015, p 56)—I have since become more aware of the importance of stressing
a complementary claim, that technique is made of identity—what we know
arises out of who we are. In other words, the “loop of circular reasoning”
that generates a material-semiotic object like DNA is not a glitch or a flaw
in genetic knowledge but an essential feature of knowledge production.
A theory of the molecular that emphasizes only the technical, or only the
identitarian, is therefore incomplete. What I hope to develop here, drawing
upon TallBear and others, is a concept of the molecular that embraces the
mutual construction of identity and technique.
Quite similar social and political debates and contestations apply to
testosterone, although its molecular structure and its biochemical function
are very different. If DNA is commonly understood as constituting race,
while in fact also being constituted by race, then testosterone is typically
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Thinking the Molecular
making claims about what a given molecule means or does. A truly radical
interdisciplinarity—one that is also intersectional—would also recognize the
differential power dynamics among these fields and critique the prevailing
hierarchy of knowledge by which they are accorded differing ontological
force. It is, after all, social and political history that determines why some
disciplines are understood as defining the most fundamental reality, others as
studying the merely cultural, and others, with even less epistemic legitimacy,
as merely forms of culture themselves.6 To approach the question of what
is material therefore demands an inquiry into the differential legitimization
of diverse forms of knowledge.
I have introduced the molecular through the “hard” molecules of
technoscience in order to appropriate it for a range of molecules that are not
measurable or localizable in the same ways. To begin with, let us consider
the materiality of what I call embodied technique.7 A gesture, a melody, a
joke, a dance, a rhythm, a habit, a gait, an exercise: By what right are such
named chunks of embodied technique habitually excluded from the realm
of the material? In whose interest is it assumed that aspects of embodiment
that cannot be reliably located and measured by technoscientific means
are in that sense immaterial? Would it not be more accurate—and more
ethical—to name those aspects of material embodiment that are localizable
and quantifiable as such, appreciating the extent of their reliability, and the
technologies this affords, but not for that reason according them greater
ontological reality? Taking the primary example developed in my own
artistic research practice, a song cannot be extracted from the body (see
Spatz, 2015, pp 136–147; Spatz, 2019). One cannot pull a song out of the
body and examine its structure independently, using the anatomical and
anatomizing method that arguably founds modern science by extracting
natural objects from their temporal and geographical contexts (Knorr
Cetina, 1992). But this does not mean that we cannot work with songs or
that they do not push back against us in their own material ways. A song
is materially embodied, even if it cannot be isolated anatomically. What
must be rejected is a definition of materiality that is based upon anatomical
dissection.8 Songs are also components or elements of our bodies. They
are inside us while also constituting us, like biochemical molecules, even if
they cannot be extracted or measured biochemically. The same goes for all
kinds of embodied knowledges: the only way to get such phenomena out of
matter is to actively exclude or dematerialize them through the invention of
an immaterial stratum of “mind” or “culture,” that which is defined against
matter. If we avoid this step, we can affirm the materiality of phenomena
that otherwise remain trapped within limiting categories of the social, the
cultural, and the cognitive.
What then are bodies made of? We are, of course, made of molecules in
the sense developed in biochemistry. We are composed of cells, inhabited
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Thinking the Molecular
The dynamics of viscosity and emergence that Saldanha describes are not
mere metaphors. These terms aim to describe the actual, material ways in
which racial and other identities operate in practice, rematerializing race
and revealing the ways in which identities are not merely constituted by
knowledge but also subtend every epistemic technique. Drawing on Elizabeth
Grosz’s Deleuzian feminist analysis of how sex is dichotomized into “the
great binary aggregates” of male and female, which Deleuze and Guattari
posit might be dismantled and recombined to proliferate “a thousand tiny
sexes,” Saldanha suggests that “the molecularization of race would consist
in its breaking up into a thousand tiny races” (2006, p 21, italics original).
I would add, however, that the molecularization of race cannot take place
purely through desedimentation. Instead it calls for a kind of material
experimentation with identity that must not only fracture and dismantle
old identities but also generate new ones. Following Saldanha, race might
be conceived as “irreducible” (2009, p 9) in a chemical rather than social
sense. It is not that an individual’s racial identity is unchangeable; on the
contrary, a molecular or reontologizing approach to identity troubles the
fixed assignment of identities to individuals. In Saldanha’s terms: “Nobody
‘has’ a race, but bodies are racialised” (2006, p 18). How might we begin to
think the relations of technique and identity in this way?
The Deleuzo–Guattarian concept of the molecular is defined in opposition
to the molar. Both terms have the same root, moles, meaning mass or
barrier, indexing the heaviness or inertia of forces; “molecule” simply adds
the diminutive cule.11 In the extraordinarily generative key passages on
the molecular in A Thousand Plateaus, what comes through is the latter’s
power of flight, its capacity for resistance and excess, always in relation to a
dominating molar force:
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Interpreting the Body
form that we know from the outside and recognize from experience,
through science, or by habit. If this is true, then we must say the same
of things human: there is a becoming-woman, a becoming-child,
that do not resemble the woman or the child as clearly distinct molar
entities. (Deleuze and Guattari, 1987, p 275)
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made of identity. There is, then, no escape from identity in the molecular.
Chemicals are not simple, easy, or light just because they are physically
small. Some molecules are indeed common and mundane. Some are inert
and barely react or combine with others. But molecules also exist that are
deadly, volatile, and explosive, even in small quantities. In their thinking of
the molecular, Deleuze and Guattari do not fully account for this radical
asymmetry. As much as they attempt to offset such a reading, they stage a
series of oppositions between the molar and the molecular in which the latter
invariably functions as the hero. As Miller observes, Deleuze and Guattari
frequently state that there is nothing superior about the molecular over the
molar, but their prose does not read that way and their examples do not bear
this out. If Deleuze and Guattari offer a power analysis of the molecular, it
is one that does not go very far into the details.
I do not reject the possibility of joy and transformation—or even moments
of limited, provisional, and immanently contestable artistic or nomadological
“immunity,” in which the world and its injustices seem to fall away. It would
not be possible to go on living from day to day if such experiences were
strictly denied. But I do reject the idea that the process of molecularization
works in one direction only, or that molecularization is a good in itself.
I would defend a politics of identity by reminding thinkers of molecules that
identity does not disappear when it is molecularized. That identity is made
of technique means that it can never be fully locked down. Even the most
heavily sedimented identities will always remain open to change as they travel
across times, places, and bodies. But that technique is made of identity means
that it never fully or finally escapes the sedimented structures of power that
produce and sustain it. Hence molecules of technique, in their relatively
free circulation, are real and can be dangerous—can have violent effects—
particularly when their substance as molecular identity is misunderstood.
As Thomas DeFrantz writes:
I have added italics to the final sentence to highlight its resonance with the
language of chemistry. With DeFrantz’s admonition in mind, I would jettison
any remaining attachment to the molecular as a good in itself, turning instead
to focus on its radical asymmetry.
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Radical asymmetry
In the first section of this chapter, I argued that racial and other identities
are not merely layers of culture, symbol, or discursive meaning added to
a more fundamental physical or technoscientific reality but should instead
be understood as “material-semiotic” chunks or molecules of technique-
identity. In the second section, I clarified that the molecular substance of
such identities does not automatically become easier to work with when
it is rendered in this way. While molecularizing identity can open up
new possibilities for experimentation and intervention, the identification
of molecules as racialized and gendered rules out any easy escape into
molecularity. Conceiving of embodiment and identity in this way—for this
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substances to displace it. In fact, the same displacement applies to many other
meta-categories of identity that might at first seem to be separate from race
but which ultimately bleed into it: nation, language, citizenship, gender,
ability, and so on. I focus here on the racial because of the vital work being
done in critical black and indigenous studies and related fields—work that
is more politically trenchant, and more engaged with radical asymmetry,
than related theories of gender or class. Whereas theories of gender seem
to have moved more easily into a molecularizing or technicizing approach,
race—in an ongoingly colonial, capitalist, and white supremacist age—seems
to carry a greater inertia, a greater stubbornness, that troubles the line of
flight into the molecular. Class analysis, for its part, unless it reontologizes
race and nation, cannot avoid the limitingly quantifying assumptions of
economic theory. Specific racial identities are then especially powerful and
urgent leverage points for rethinking the molecular relations of technique
and identity.
Thinking race in apprenticeship to black studies especially compels
us to push beyond the idea that certain bodies carry race—that race is a
property of racialized bodies—and to recognize instead how race intersects
and transects bodies, inheres in the floors and windows, floats in the
air, and is atmospheric, palpable, chemical. Yet, in the same breath, race
theorized from blackness extends its slippages to other kinds of identities
and causes a vast conceptual house of cards to collapse. Blackness may
be a gender (Ziyad, 2017; Nyong’o, 2021). Whiteness may be a religion
(Carter, 2021). Jewishness may be a gender, a language, a way of thinking
(Pellegrini, 1995; Boyarin, 1996; Kraemer, 2020). From the perspective
of a critical hermeneutic methodology based in the arts and humanities,
sociological categories of race and gender are rough approximations of what
is materially experienced in concrete moments, events, and practices. Such
a perspective might even take the nation-state, major religious formations,
and Marxist formulations of class as subcategories of the racial, where the
racial is understood as the molecular materiality of technique/identity. The
materialities of blackness—and, indeed, of whiteness, brownness, and other
ethnicons beyond the grammar of color—are not limited to “race” as a census
category offered by the nation-state.14 These materialities are transnational,
in some cases perhaps planetary, and their recognition is bound up in a call
that increasingly exceeds that of antiracism: decolonization (Tuck and Yang,
2012; Mignolo and Walsh, 2018; Gopal, 2021).
In this sense, race refers to a concept of technique/identity that
incorporates not only embodiment and culture but also deep histories and
materialities of trauma, dissociation, shame, violence, pleasure, and loss. The
concept of embodiment, like many others, has been rendered misleadingly
uniform by technoscientific methods of measurement. Thinking race
anew, even reontologizing it (to ontologize it in a different way), reminds us
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been conceived and modeled. In every case, there are heavy histories and
ongoing, large-scale power relations to contend with, but also emergent
and unfixed relations of experimentation, discovery, and care, all of which
might be brought to presence in future methods.
Artistic research—with other experimental methods that reject the
onto-epistemic cut separating technique and identity, knowledge and power,
instead placing the cut elsewhere to reveal other realities (on this notion
of the cut, see “Two Cuts” in Spatz, 2020b)—implements a shift from the
register of theoretical account to that of practical experimentation. It calls for
experimental research in, rather than on, both identities as fields of knowledge
and knowledges as fields of identity. Such approaches cannot claim to solve
or resolve the problem of identity but perhaps can offer a different way into
it, taking identities as substantive and asymmetrical research problems rather
than barriers to research. What if we took for granted that racial, gender,
and other identities are constantly present, in our bodies, in architecture,
in places, but that they manifest in different ways, radically asymmetrically?
What if we attempted to investigate the phases and states, the reactions and
catalysts, the compounds and solutions, through which identities act and
interact in particular moments?
This would be both a chemistry of identity and a reframing of chemistry
from the perspective of critical decolonial thought. It would be both an
expansion of a conceptual framework (the molecular) and a methodological
shift in the very forms of knowledge (embodied, artistic, situated, poetic
research). Perhaps such a move could allow us to speak of identity as real and
present, full, material, active, dynamic, and, at the same time, not static, not
individualized, not amenable to any kind of grid. Perhaps a turn away from
some of the disciplinary limitations of sociology and law (to say nothing of
economics and cognitive science) could enable us to recognize that the being
of identities operates not only in the classification of bodies but also as the
substances that make up those bodies. This claim is not so much paradoxical
as it is experimental. It is not so much anti-or postdisciplinary as radically
interdisciplinary, with everything yet remaining to be said and with much
more than saying needed.
Notes
1
An early form of this argument was advanced in Spatz (2019). That article focuses on
an experimental approach to contemporary (jewish) identity developed in my artistic
research, whereas this one attempts to establish a wider theoretical framework. Following an
orthographic practice that I first implemented in the 2019 article, in this chapter I lowercase
all identity terms, even those that are often capitalized (jewish, black, white, chinese, etc).
In quotations, I retain each author’s capitalization or lowercasing of such terms.
2
My previous work (Spatz, 2015, 2020a) has relied especially upon Karin Knorr Cetina’s
discussion of the unfolding nature of scientific objects, including proteins, and the
“libidinal” quality of the relationships scientists develop with them, in Schatzki, Knorr
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Interpreting the Body
Cetina and von Savigny (2001); and upon Hans-Jörg Rheinberger’s (1997) detailed
treatment of the constantly shifting boundary between the known and the unknown
through the iteration of experimental systems; see also Pickering (1995). I find these
works in some ways more precise and compelling than Karen Barad’s better-known but
limitingly physicalist concept of “intra-action” (2007).
3
For more on Preciado’s work as a model for embodied and artistic research, see Spatz
(2020a). On gender as technique, see Spatz, “Gender as Technique” (2015, pp 171–214).
4
Chen’s discussion of viruses as “nonliving” yet “closer to life” has become even more
relevant in the era of COVID-19, including with regard to the racialization of its chinese
origins. On the lowercasing of chinese and other identity terms in this chapter, see note 1.
5
On biomythography as method, see also Chen (2012, p 167) and Rosamond S. King
(2019).
6
A call for interdisciplinary intersectionality, or intersectional interdisciplinarity, is the
endpoint of my chapter “Thresholds” in Blue Sky Body (Spatz, 2020a), as well as a central
aspect of the larger project of which this chapter is part.
7
Developing a materialist and epistemic concept of technique is the main goal of What
a Body Can Do (Spatz, 2015). That book builds upon and extends the work of Mauss,
Foucault, Bourdieu, and Butler, arguing that embodied technique is epistemic: It is
knowledge as much as it may also be repetition, performance, habit, or rules.
8
It might be suggested that, from Mauss and Merleau-Ponty to more recent developments in
new and speculative materialisms, the embodiment and materiality of technique is already
well established. Perhaps this is true within a certain narrow theoretical register, but there
is no sense in which the materiality of song or gesture is broadly understood to rival that
of bone or tissue. Moreover, recognizing that a song is materially embodied in the act of
singing is very different from treating songs as substantive knowledge, let alone as a kind
of material substance. My thinking here begins from the predominantly white thinkers of
technique, habitus, and performativity cited in Spatz (2015) and extends further through an
engagement with radically new materialist approaches being developed in black studies. Some
of the works I have been learning from include those of Weheliye (2014); Sharpe (2016);
Moten (2018); Nyong’o (2019); T.L. King (2019); Bey (2020); and McKittrick (2021).
9
This is not to suggest that anything and everything exists in molecular form, as in a “flat”
ontology. As I have argued elsewhere (see “Thresholds” in Spatz, 2020a), the problem
with a flattening “object-oriented ontology” (eg, Harman, 2018) is that, in its attempt to
render everything commensurable, it jettisons any concern for the depths of knowledge.
Such an approach is not even interdisciplinary, let alone intersectional.
10
For an application of Deleuze and Guattari’s “particle-sign” to the “molecular action of
art,” see Katve-Kaisa Kontturi, “From Double Navel to Particle-Sign: Toward the A-
Signifying Work of Painting” in Barrett and Bolt (2013).
11
Online etymology dictionary: https://www.etymonline.com/word/molecule.
12
For an analysis of the antiblackness sometimes carried by calls for multiracialism, see
Sexton (2008).
13
The need for an analysis that is unflinching but not structuralist refers to my critique of
Frank Wilderson’s work, which I develop briefly later in the chapter and more extensively
in the larger project of which this chapter is a part.
14
I borrow an expanded sense of the term “ethnicon” from Baker (2017, pp 16–46).
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Baker, C.M. (2017) Jew, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
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Knorr Cetina, K. (1992) ‘The couch, the cathedral, and the laboratory: on
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65
3
Interpreting Africa’s
Seselelãme: Bodily Ways of
Knowing in a Globalized World
Kathryn Linn Geurts and Sefakor Komabu-Pomeyie
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INTERPRETING AFRICA’S SESELELÃME
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(see Geurts, 2002a, pp 37–69; Geurts and Adikah, 2006). These initial
projects brought seselelãme to the foreground as we investigated not only the
personal meanings of sensory experiences but also the cultural grounding of
bodily ways of knowing and child socialization practices that inculcated such
implicitly relational selves (Geurts, 2002a, pp 73–165). Our approach to “the
body” therefore aligned well with an emerging interdisciplinary approach
called “sensory studies,” which in part aimed “to help problematize the
increasingly homogenized notion of ‘the body’ in contemporary scholarship
by advocating a modal and intermodal or relational approach to the study
of our corporeal faculties” (Bull et al, 2006, p 6).5 Indicating clearly that
“the senses mediate the relationship between self and society, mind and
body, idea and object,” the authors of “Introducing Sensory Studies” took
the following stance on the body:
This relational focus will disrupt the presumption of the unity of the
body (which has simply taken over from the modernist presumption of
the unity of the subject) by highlighting the differential elaboration of
the senses in diverse times and places, and underscoring the multiple
forms of human sensuousness. (Bull et al, 2006, p 6)
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INTERPRETING AFRICA’S SESELELÃME
learning and academic achievement does not occur at the expense of being
alert to his sense of happiness, joy, and worthiness. Kodzo wrote:
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Interpreting the Body
Kodzo’s reflection is striking in the way it tacks back and forth from
achievement (successfully performing a cervical stitch on his first attempt)
to heartfelt sentiment (the baby delivered through that procedure is now a
professor); the way it moves from palpably sensible activities (performing
a tracheotomy on a child, rehabilitating a bore-hole to bring forth clean
water) to a wide range of emotions (gratitude, happiness, disappointment,
and shame). We can feel an alertness and intensity as the doctor recollects
what seselelãme calls to mind. Another response from Komabu-Pomeyie’s
network of Ghanaians came from Akpene, a 40-year-old nurse, and we
present it here unedited:
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body morphology that human reason has grown (Lakoff and Johnson,
1999). However, cultural diversity in language and experience creates
at least some variation. In fact, they explain, “once we have learned a
conceptual system, it is neurally instantiated in our brains and we are
not free to think just anything” (p 5). If conceptual systems are neurally
instantiated, resulting in our not being free to think outside or beyond
them, then what about the instantiation of “bodily ways of knowing” or
something like seselelãme? If a fitness coach in the United States declares
what she teaches to be seselelãme, will students in her Body Pump or High
Intensity Interval Training class be able to then experience seselelãme? Lakoff
and Johnson (1999, p 6) hedge by suggesting that “our conceptual systems
are not totally relative and not merely a matter of historical contingency,
even though a degree of conceptual relativity does exist and even though
historical contingency does matter a great deal.” A degree of relativity does
exist; historical contingency does matter. Here, as the term moves “out
of Africa” and circulates around “the web,” we wonder to what degree
historical contingencies surrounding seselelãme matter and what happens
as it is reinterpreted in new contexts.
The whimsical phrase “focus pocus now dot com” is used by McCulley,
the fitness coach, to designate one of the sites where she imparts her wisdom.
As indicated, she thinks that seselelãme aptly captures what she teaches, and
she provides the following background:
Seselelãme as “an inner realm in which all the world is felt” sounds like
the end goal of a spiritual quest; it has the ring of New Age promises of
enlightenment, or attainment of a godlike overview. To be able to feel all of
the world—from Asia to Europe to Africa to the Americas—inside of yourself,
in your inner realm, once you have engaged in a workout at the gym is,
needless to say, a tall order. Some would say this is simply hyperbole and not
meant to be taken literally. But a second claim found on focus pocus now
dot com is that “seselelame … recognizes that the entire human experience
is felt in our bodies” (McCulley, 2019). In comparison with what Ghanaians
say about seselelãme, this is a rather preposterous claim. To suggest a workout
at a gym can lead to feeling the entire human experience in one’s body is simply
not sensible; it is abstract and categorical. Through recourse to measurement
(entire, not just partial), it makes an attempt at prestige. What we want to
ask is, how did seselelãme become linked to such a claim? What was “picked
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up” from Geurts’ writings that then led people in Global North contexts to
embellish, exaggerate, or distort seselelãme in this way?
Anthropology has rightfully been criticized for advancing the European
Enlightenment project of “differencing” and “othering” peoples all over the
world. Princeton University professor of music Kofi Agawu, who grew up in
the northern Ewe-speaking area of Ghana, has argued eloquently about the
disingenuousness of supposedly comparing cultural practices when the people
live in drastically different economic spheres (2012, p 123). He calls out those
of us ethnographers who have been too wedded to “a persistent strategy of
‘differencing’” and too slow to “embrace sameness” (p 120). While Geurts’
work resisted “essentializing” Anlo-speaking people and made great effort
to account for processes by which the so-called “knowledge” reported in
publications was arrived at, in the end some of the renderings of seselelãme may
very well have downplayed “residual similarities” among Anlo-Ewe people
and other human groups, and some of the descriptions of seselelãme may have
given an “edge to strangeness and novelty” (pp 119, 123). But a perceived
“edge” of difference has been amplified through the globalization of seselelãme.
Interpretations of seselelãme as novel and exotic are apparent in Phil
Shepherd’s use of this Ewe term. On his website, Shepherd describes himself
as an “international authority on embodiment,” and the autobiographical
opening of his book Radical Wholeness portrays a longstanding interest in
“cultures radically different from [his] own” (2017, p 7). In fact, his first
chapter title—“Feel-Feel-at-Flesh-Inside”—seems aimed at demonstrating
such global cultural awareness. He devotes at least ten pages to explaining
what he learned about Anlo-Ewe sensory philosophy from reading Culture
and the Senses (Geurts, 2002a), and as a jumping off point for explaining
his own journey “into greater embodiment,” he borrows our morpheme-
by-morpheme account of what seselelãme can be understood to index.
Shepherd’s enthusiasm is palpable. Writing for a lay rather than scholarly
audience, his book blends genres of memoir and self-help guide. He asserts
that relative to “our culture” in which “we live in our heads” and “deem
the body to be without intelligence,” in some “radically different cultures”
(such as Anlo-Ewe), people are attentive to their bodies (Shepherd, 2017,
p 43). For purposes of interpreting the body, Shepherd’s view is a provocative
hypothesis, but it is unproven (which will be discussed later) and by no
means representative of what we think the existence of seselelãme means.
Othering, exoticizing, and cultural appropriation are, of course, completely
entangled. Making “other cultures” appear exotic or at least “non-Western”
evolved alongside the discipline and profession of anthropology, a religious
zeal for missionizing, and a political agenda of expansion and colonization.
Negative (racialized) stereotyping has been transmogrified, to some extent,
into lucrative cultural appropriation (eg, see Greene, 2008), so that trafficking
in things (formerly marked as) “primitive” can now be profitable. It is not
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The Anlo-Ewe don’t just hear sounds; they feel them through the
body. They don’t just see sights; they feel them in the body. So while
we have only the Chosen Five—each an exteroceptor that imputes a
boundary around the self—the Anlo-Ewe have seselelame, an inner
realm in which all the world is felt. … Seselelame is an umbrella
or “uber” sense that feels reality reverberate through “the cavern.”
(Shepherd, 2017, pp 17, 23)
The phrase “an inner realm in which all the world is felt” is what McCulley,
the fitness instructor, mentioned in relation to how her classes at the gym are
unique. One of the problems here is that seselelãme has nothing to do with
feeling “all the world.” We are also not aware of any bodily way of knowing
(nor an organ or “an inner realm”) that makes such an experience possible.
These distortions of seselelãme remind us of one of Agawu’s points in his
essay “Contesting Difference”: “While Africans deserve full recognition
for whatever is unique about their critical and cultural practices, they do
not need fake or facile attributions” (2012, p 120, emphasis added), and “what
I am arguing for … is not sameness but the hypostatized presumption of
sameness” (p 126). Imagining Anlo-Ewe people possessing an “uber sense”
and an ability to feel the whole world creates a caricature, not simply a difference.
Julia Jude is a systemic psychotherapist who vacillates between equating
seselelãme with AOTI (an acronym she uses for African Oral Traditional
Ideas [2016, p 555]), passing it off as “my inventive approach [sic]
Seselelame” (2013, p 194) and elevating it to an analytic perspective on
the same plane as phenomenology, feminism, and systemic constructivism
(p 136).7 When conducting a Google search query about seselelãme,
Jude’s Journal of Family Therapy article (2016) comes up as the first search
engine response page, which is disappointing since seselelãme does not
coincide with any of the ways she deploys it. What are we to make of
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INTERPRETING AFRICA’S SESELELÃME
this? Similar to McCulley and Shepherd, Jude both distorts seselelãme and
treats it pragmatically—zeroing in on its potential for commoditization.
At the end of her dissertation she explains that she plans on “applying
the Seselelame approach within a clinic-based setting” and “facilitating
workshops … as a way of introducing the Seselelame frame” and
“establishing a training placement, creating opportunities for trainee
family therapists to experience the Seselelame approach” (2013, p 225).
She also indicates engagement in “publication of a Seselelame tool kit”
and “a Seselelame performative arts project for working with young
people” (p 226). Barely attributing seselelãme to the Ewe language or
Anlo-Ewe people, Jude explains: “I came to take on knowledge from
my ancestry that promotes a feeling in the body perspective” (2016
p 556), and “the description of ideas from AOTI provides an understanding
of the themes that I found helpful which led to transforming some of the
main principles of AOTI resulting in the invention of Seselelame” (2013,
p 108). Other than a passing comment about how “I was encouraged by
my supervisor to become curious with my inventive approach Seselelame”
(p 194), we can find no reason for the word to even appear in her
dissertation; she uses it incorrectly, and in nearly every instance it could be
replaced by the English word “feeling.” On the other hand, seselelãme has an
exotic, catchy quality; it could yield good market appeal and merchandizing
power, which seems to be the motivation behind Jude’s claims to have
established these trademark-worthy expressions: The Seselelame Tool Kit
book (p 94); The Seselelame Approach (p 98); The Seselelame Model
(p 197). Making seselelãme itself into products and services is a manifestation
of categorical-rationalist thinking in the extreme and the antithesis of the
modal thinking so beautifully exhibited by seselelãme. It isolates, fixes, and
stabilizes seselelãme’s properties into three categories of services. Mirroring
Shepherd’s description of seselelãme as “an inner realm in which all the
world is felt” (2017, p 17), Jude ultimately concludes that “seselelame
posits that everything is connected” (2016, p 563).
The distortions and exaggerations we see in the claims of Shepherd,
McCulley, and Jude play to Global North cultural trends centering on
personal transformation, mindfulness training, and the human potential
movement. The Esalen Institute in California, for example, describes itself
as “a global network of seekers devoted to the belief that we are all capable
of the extraordinary,” so a seselelãme workshop teaching people to find their
inner realm, where they will be able to connect everything and feel the whole
world, could certainly appeal to those desiring extraordinary capabilities and
be quite lucrative as well. At this point we return to more organic renderings
of seselelãme as a means of probing why the reification and commoditization
of seselelãme is problematic.
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A lady and I were carrying the setup communion table to the front of
the congregation during a communion service at church last Sunday.
Then, suddenly, I felt “the glass communion cup will fall and break”
because I was in [a]wheelchair. I smiled it off because I thought it was
a strange thought. After we had put the table down, the lady, in an
attempt to lift up the lace covering the table, caused the communion
cup to tilt, fall, and break. Instantly, I felt, “Oh! God was speaking
to me through that feeling before. Why didn’t I take it seriously and
forewarn the lady to be careful?” I consider seselelãme the appropriate
word to convey this experience because I had heard and perceived
(within me) the consciousness that something was going to happen.
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how a human smile can have the effect of melting, soothing, or calming
feelings in the body, flesh, or skin. It also demonstrates the high value
that Komabu-Pomeyie and Anlo-Ewe people place on being attentive to
visceral dimensions of knowing. In this example we also see that seselelãme
does not always result in bodily ways of knowing that lead to triumph or
positive outcomes. Sometimes knowledge is off or wrong, no matter
how we arrive at it, and so this also contrasts sharply with Global North
appropriations of seselelãme that fixate on how it supposedly brings power
or extraordinary capabilities.
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The authors were surprised that participants who engaged in the study in
Accra were not able to demonstrate greater accuracy at perceiving their heart
rates. They asked: “How can we explain the fact that West Africans, who
think of themselves as highly attuned to their bodies, are actually less able
than European Americans to detect bodily changes” (Chentsova-Dutton
and Dzokoto, 2014, p 674)? Several possible explanations were explored.
The discipline of psychology shows that people who report more somatic
symptoms (relative to other people) are often not good at accurately detecting
actual physiological changes in their bodies. Certain situational circumstances
can activate their somatic schemata, and this seems to interfere with accuracy,
or seems to have a disruptive effect. It is possible that asking participants to
track their heart rates caused the activation of their “schemata for the types of
heart rate changes that are associated with fear,” which include an expectation
of spikes. But anticipating the fear-induced spikes could inadvertently cause
them to overlook “actual, typically more gradual, increases and drops in
heartbeat over the course of the film” (p 675).
Unlike the uses of seselelãme discussed previously, which aim to appeal to
popular audiences and enhance commercial activities, these psychological
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I hear how a dear one passes on and tears begin rolling down my cheeks,
just because my receptive heart told me that’s a loss. I hear that someone
dear or close to me has won a visa lottery and quickly I jump up in
excitement, all because my receptive heart tells me that’s good news and
so my emotions follow and are exposed publicly or openly because of
that piece of news. This indicates that I experience emotional changes
based on what I receive into myself as information—good and bad,
positive and negative—as well as what my senses receive.
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Concluding remarks
This chapter has presented a handful of ways in which seselelãme has been
culturally appropriated, commoditized, distorted, removed from its organic
context, and adulterated. Why should this matter? What is at stake here
and why should we care? In the first instance, if seselelãme attracts people
(especially in the Global North) because it offers an alternative to mind–
body dualism or “five centuries of rationalocentrism,” then it behooves us to
listen closely to those who organically live with seselelãme and align our own
interpretations of seselelãme with theirs rather than distort—or pollute it with
our own. Only then might we actually learn from seselelãme and maximize
our potential to cross over into a more rhythmic, sensible, transformative
(noncategorical) mode of being and knowing. We repeat Kofi Agawu’s
claim that “While Africans deserve full recognition for whatever is unique
about their critical and cultural practices, they do not need fake or facile
attributions” (2012, p 120). Fake and facile representations lead to stereotypes
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Notes
1
For an extended discussion of these categories and how seselelãme poses alternative pathways
to processing experiences and ways of knowing, see Geurts’ (2002b) piece that deals with
“cultural categories.”
2
For yet another three-way division, see Laplantine’s (2015, p 59) discussion of “the
impossibility or at least the difficulty that is still often ours today, of perceiving a continuity
between the different dimensions of the living: organic life (reduced in Descartes to the
mechanical), psychological life, life in society.”
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INTERPRETING AFRICA’S SESELELÃME
3
Participants in the survey have all been given pseudonyms and composite identities.
4
A plural “we” and “our” is used in this chapter to refer historically to Geurts and numerous
Anlo people involved in this research, as well as specifically to Komabu-Pomeyie and
Geurts as coauthors. For background on how we met see Geurts and Komabu-Pomeyie
(2016).
5
For a more current overview of sensory studies, also see Howes (2019).
6
Variations in the spelling, accenting, italicization, and capitalization of the term seselelãme
reflect its usage among the Western institutions and persons discussed in this chapter.
7
Here we might point out that seselelãme could very well be or become such an analytic
perspective or ideology. It is not difficult to try a thought experiment in which Africa
colonized Europe (in history) and therefore nowdays in school instead of studying
Cartesianism or phenomenology we would be studying ubuntu or seselelãme. But that
did not happen, so it is only in a thought experiment that seselelãme presently holds
such stature.
8
The “mind–body problem” takes up the relationship between mental entities and physical/
material phenomena, or the problem of consciousness and the brain (see Feigl, 1967;
Kim, 2010). Within the field of psychology, a particular programmatic orientation has
recast the mind–body problem in terms of “visceral perception” or the mind’s ability to
detect shifts, changes, or movement within internal organs of the body.
9
By critiquing specific studies that touch on seselelãme we do not mean to suggest that all
psychology research absents the social (see especially Markus and Kitayama, 2010). And
while psychology may not center the social, social-psychology and cognitive cultural
sociology certainly do (see Turner, 2008).
10
In this specific instance Haupt is referring to the Solomon Linda case of his song “Mbube,”
which was appropriated numerous times over and eventually used by Disney Corporation
in its film The Lion King, but the point is more generalized throughout the piece.
11
See our critique of Antonio Damasio’s neuro-biologically based psychology in Geurts
(2005).
References
Agawu, K. (2012) ‘Contesting difference: a critique of Africanist
ethnomusicology’, in M. Clayton, T. Herbert and R. Middleton (eds) The
Cultural Study of Music (2nd edn), New York: Routledge, pp 117–126.
Aposhyan, S. (2007) Natural Intelligence: Body-Mind Integration and Human
Development, Norwell, MA: Now Press.
Bourdieu, P. (1977) Outline of a Theory of Practice, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press.
Bull, M., Gilroy, P., Howes, D. and Kahn D. (2006) ‘Introducing sensory
studies’, The Senses and Society, 1(1): 5–7.
Chentsova-D utton, Y.E. and Dzokoto, V. (2014) ‘Listen to your
heart: the cultural shaping of interoceptive awareness and accuracy’,
Emotion, 14(4): 666–678.
Classen, C. (1993) Worlds of Sense: Exploring the Senses in History and across
Cultures, London: Routledge.
Classen, C. (1997) ‘Foundations for an anthropology of the senses’,
International Social Science Journal, 49(153): 401–412.
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INTERPRETING AFRICA’S SESELELÃME
Howes D. (2003) Sensual Relations: Engaging the Senses in Culture and Social
Theory, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Howes, D. (2006) ‘Charting the sensorial revolution’, Senses and Society,
1(1): 113–128.
Howes, D. (2015) ‘The extended sensorium: introduction to the sensory
and social thought of François Laplantine’, in F. Laplantine (auth) The Life
of the Senses: Introduction to a Modal Anthropology, translated by J. Furniss,
London: Bloomsbury, pp vii–xiv.
Howes, D. (2019) ‘Multisensory anthropology’, Annual Review of
Anthropology, 48: 17–28.
Howes, D. and Classen, C. (2014) Ways of Sensing: Understanding the Senses
in Society, London: Routledge.
Jude, J. (2013) ‘Family systemic therapy in the home: reigniting the fire’,
unpublished dissertation, University of Bedfordshire, UK.
Jude, J. (2016) ‘Seselelame: feelings in the body: working alongside systemic
ideas’, Journal of Family Therapy, 38: 555–571.
Kim, J. (2010) Essays in the Metaphysics of Mind, Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M. (1999) Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind
and Its Challenge to Western Thought, New York: Basic Books.
Laplantine, F. (2015) The Life of the Senses: Introduction to a Modal Anthropology,
translated by J. Furniss, London: Bloomsbury.
Markus, H.R. and Kitayama, S. (2010) ‘Cultures and selves: a cycle of mutual
constitution’, Perspectives on Psychological Science, 5(4): 420–430.
McCulley, S. (2019) ‘Seselelame: holistic integrated interoceptive
training’ [Blog], May 19, available from: https://web.archive.org/
web/20201101015846/https://focuspocusnow.com/2019/05/19/
seselelame-holistic-integrated-interoceptive-training/.
Shepherd, P. (2017) Radical Wholeness, Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books.
Shore, B. (1996) Culture in Mind: Cognition, Culture, and the Problem of
Meaning, New York: Oxford University Press.
Turner, B.S. (2008) The Body and Society: Explorations in Social Theory (3rd
edn), London: SAGE.
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4
What is the body and what can it do? How does the lived body experience
itself and what are the structural and historical vectors that mediate its
emergence and disappearance? The intermittent appearance of the racialized
body in and out of theory, history, and politics compels us to ask the questions
that have dominated body and embodiment studies (Douglas, 1966; Elias,
1978; Turner, 1984, 2012; Featherstone et al, 1991; Butler, 1993; Shilling,
2003) in a new way. This chapter was written in a moment when Black
and racialized bodies have once again gained prominence because of the
brutal murder of George Floyd in the United States, suffocated under a
white policeman’s knee. And yet, we have been here before and found that
just as suddenly as the racialized body appears in our critiques and analyses,
it disappears.
Critical approaches to the body, from social constructionism (Weinberg,
2012) to feminism (Mohanty, 1991; Crenshaw, 1994) to critical race studies
(Weheliye, 2014), have attempted to respond to the disappearance of the
racialized body with varying levels of success. Feminism, as a unifying
arc and promise of gender justice, has needed to reckon with its own
racializing imaginaries, working through white feminisms’ uncomfortable
relationship with Black women’s class and race subordination (Olufemi,
2020). Epistemological claims advanced within white feminism and the
European philosophical tradition—about gender as a category and gender
equality as a social process—have failed to consider how colonial histories
perpetuate unequal subject locations for people of color and, in particular,
women located in the Global South. While there have been movements
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Interpreting the Body
that our textual analysis allows for a nuanced understanding of how African
womanhood is negotiated and how girls’ bodies are made available for, and
find ways to resist, colonial architectures of power.
Phenomenology of Blackness
The phenomenological tradition of body studies emerges from the writings
of Husserl (1990), Heidegger (1962), and Merleau-Ponty (1962), who each
in their own way sought to challenge Descartes’ famous proposition “cogito,
ergo sum” (I think, therefore I am), which, situating the seat of the self
in the reasoning faculty of the mind, set up a dualism between mind and
body. Phenomenology did not offer a method for solving this mind–body
dichotomy so much as it presented a new analytical lens through which to
interrogate it (Crossley, 2012). According to Descartes, the search for the
truth required a quest for rationality outside the fleshy self: “in Cartesianism,
the human mind is viewed as an island of awareness afloat in the vast sea of
insensate matter” (Leder, 1990, p 8). Descartes’ proposition sets up a split
between rationality and sensuous experience, with the seat of the self (the
thinking/rational mind) capable of existing in spite of—and thus independent
from—bodily senses.
The premise of mind–body dualism has been debunked by numerous
theories of the self, most notably the social constructionist tradition, which
relocates bodies within social contexts, histories, cultures, and institutions.
Social constructionists such as Mauss (1973) refer to techniques of the body
as specific ways in which the bodily practices of everyday life are products
of enculturated experience, arguments that are also found in Foucauldian
and Bourdieusian perspectives on social life (see Foucault, 1979; Bourdieu,
1984). The most profound challenge of social constructionists to Cartesian
dualism has been their dismantling of biologically essentialist ideas of the
naturalized body to explain social differences, particularly gender, race,
and sexuality. Constructionists consider instead how institutional structures
create conditions for these inequalities. As Weinberg (2012, p 144) notes,
the social constructionist tradition provides a rigorous epistemic basis from
which to challenge essentialist thought, which “seeks to reduce historical
and cultural difference to biology” and thus “runs the risk of reifying and
indeed promoting inequality and injustice.”
While Cartesian dualism locates the mind (and hence the reflective
rational self) outside the body, Husserl (1990) considers that perception is
a sensuous experience and that knowing the self is a relational exercise
involving an embodied disposition—a way of seeing and interpreting
experience. Drawing on Husserl and influenced by Heidegger (1962),
Merleau-Ponty (1962) expands the interpretive process by which bodies
can know themselves through intersubjectivities and relational engagements
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with social and cultural life. He maintains that locating bodies is the central
process through which we become “beings-in-the-world.” He suggests in
the Phenomenology of Perception (Merleau-Ponty, 1962) that the body cannot
know itself without engaging with the external world, a process that can be
achieved only through the senses. “The corporeal schema is a sense of itself
that the body arrives at through the meditation of its involvement with the
world” (Crossley, 2012, p 137).1
It is precisely this corporeal schema that Frantz Fanon (1986), in his
groundbreaking book Black Skin, White Masks, suggests is an unachievable
task for Black bodies who cannot know themselves under the weight of
colonial oppression. The freedoms and agencies that Merleau-Ponty alludes
to—of becoming a self-knowing, rational, agentic self—are ultimately
denied to Black bodies, who under colonial capture are stripped of their
humanity and relegated to objecthood. Locked in colonial struggle, the
white man is overidentified as subject and the Black man as object (Rajan-
Rankin, 2018). In response to the colonial problematic, Fanon reveals not
how it feels to be Black but how it feels to be made to feel one’s Blackness
in a world that reviles it. The method that Fanon develops for this account
combines psychoanalytic theory and phenomenology of racism with what
he calls “sociogeny,” a term he coins to convey that, notwithstanding the
way it is lived in body and mind, racism is rooted in socially, rather than
biologically, produced phenomena. The term sociogeny thus allows him
to do several things at once, including: prioritizing a genealogical account
of racism itself; critiquing the insufficient explanations of racism found in
psychoanalysis, psychology, and psychiatry (Mannoni, 1956; Adler, 1964;
Lacan, 1977); and challenging the phenomenological schemas of European
philosophy that fail to account for the struggle of the colonized subject to
attain their humanity as anything but the belated entry of racialized men and
women into a universal existential drama (Sartre, 1976). What Fanon wants
to assert, by contrast, is that “Black consciousness is immanent in its own
eyes” (1986, p 135). He writes, “I am not a potentiality of something else;
I am wholly what I am. I do not have to look for the universal” (p 135). The
phenomenology of the racialized body that Fanon gives us, then, is rooted
in an account of how colonial societies produce Black bodies.
However, Fanonist phenomenologies of Blackness are centered on the
Black man’s body, which raises questions about how Fanon’s work can be
used to theorize the lives of colonized women. Fanon recognizes both
gender and sexuality as vital parts of the colonial machine and questions
whether there can be authentic human relationships in a society structured
by colonial inequalities. He knows that the experience of women of color
differs from that of men of color in the colony, but his discussion of Black
women is confined to his chapter on sexuality, specifically Black women’s
relationships with white men (and their referred impacts on Black men’s
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Interpreting the Body
The key problematic, then, remains the disappearance and erasure of the
colonized woman’s body precisely because in feminist analyses the bodies
central to the analysis are white women’s bodies and in colonial analyses they
are Black or Brown men’s bodies. Which theoretical approach will allow us
to make visible a body that has been colonized through both racialization and
gendering? It seems clear that we must begin with the colonized woman’s
own account of her body and its experiences. It is for this reason we propose
to turn to literary texts as a source of theory about the lived experience
of the colonized woman. Literature produced by colonized or formerly
colonized women themselves offers us not a simple transcription of what
these women experience but an interpretation of how their bodies live,
move, and shape themselves in a world that does not see them. It signals a
return, and an intention, to reclaim the telling of their own stories, without
they themselves or their stories being filtered through gendered or racialized
hierarchies that have historically silenced their voices.
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the lives of women, Dangarembga turns the text into an explicit challenge
to both Fanon’s and Sartre’s theories of colonialism, which see colonialism
as a pathology lived primarily in men’s minds and bodies. Sartre’s reference
to “consent” in the creation and perpetuation of the nervous condition
also speaks to the structural machineries of colonized memory that persist
in locating racialized bodies as being out of place (Douglas, 1966). The
embodied task of Black presencing is, then, to examine how Black bodies
are not just bluntly thrust into emergence or erasure but are agentic actors
who pivot, navigate, resist, and recover within an unequal plane of power.
Finally, a central aspect of our interest in the novel lies in the close,
defamiliarized attention that Dangarembga gives to embodied experiences.
Defamiliarization is a literary technique whereby close, phenomenological,
attention to ordinary everyday experiences renders them new to the reader,
enabling them to experience familiar situations and sensations as if for the first
time (Shklovsky, 1965). In this way the text grants us entry to a landscape
wherein the vitalism and enchanted materialism of everyday life can come
to the fore (Bennett, 2001). Nervous Conditions is replete with moments in
which adolescent girls discover what is possible in a native, female body. It
thus offers an immediate account of how gender makes their bodies available
to colonialism even as they offer resistance through subtle and overt forms
of refusal.
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education for herself. The action of the novel shifts back and forth between
the homestead and the mission school, which allows us to see how both
Tambu and Nyasha struggle to shape themselves into “good native girls.”
Though deeply attached to each other, the girls have different
understandings of what is possible, and they choose different strategies
for navigating their lives. By the end of the novel, we see two versions of
African girlhood struggling with modernity and Black identity. Nyasha’s
Western education brings a restless consciousness that sits in deep conflict
with her traditional roles and is manifest in her “nervous condition” of
disordered eating. Tambu has won a scholarship to the prestigious Sacred
Heart convent school and is about to leave her uncle’s home for further
trials in colonial education. She has learned to survive “under the radar,”
navigating the classed expectations of being a poor relative and learning to
capitalize on her uncle’s benevolence, only to find herself in an ambivalent
relationship with her emerging self. Unable to go back and uncertain about
what lies ahead, both girls are locked in a vertiginous assembly of becoming
and disappearing: the nervous condition.
A colonial education
Dangarembga’s foregrounding of the problem of education is commonplace
in postcolonial literature, where education is the apparatus through which
colonial subjects acquire worth and mobility. However, as Nair (1995)
notes, the many fictional representations and critical discussions of colonial
education do “not address the anonymous female subjects who were not
allowed an education in the first place” (p 130). When we first meet her,
Tambu’s body is valued as one that may be exchanged for material value
to her family, in the future, as a wife and mother. An education does not
appear to increase the value of Tambu’s body within this economy and so
she is not allotted one. Through much of her early life in the homestead,
Tambu is almost invisible: Babamukuru has sent money for her school fees,
but her father has misappropriated those funds. She works hard growing her
own crops to sell and obtain money for her fees, and her brother thwarts her
efforts. However, when her brother dies unexpectedly, she takes his place at
the missionary school. The death of her brother gives her a new life within
the colonial patriarchy. It is a reality that she states matter-of-factly: “I am
not sorry my brother died. … [T]he event of my brother’s passing and the
events of my story cannot be separated, my story is not after all about death,
but about my escape” (Dangarembga, 1988, p 1). It is only the absence of
other colonized boys in the family that makes Tambu’s body available for
education. Access to the school is a crucial turning point in her life, since
education gives her female body license to move around the world as the
men do, off the homestead and into the mission school.
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time overdetermined and curtailed. Her role as the patriarch’s wife means
that greater demands for certain kinds of reproductive labor fall upon her—
cooking, laundry, management of food—so she appears to be in charge.
At the same time, however, the women on the homestead do not trust or
valorize her accomplishment as an educated woman and merely defer to
her as custom requires. Maiguru experiences her education as a burden
that forces her to work harder and harder for a home and family in which
her labor goes unrecognized. Tambu does not experience her return to the
homestead as a celebration either, which contrasts strongly with her account
of the triumphal homecoming given to her brother.
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implications in the way I enjoyed the rhythm” (p 42) and, accordingly, her
“dancing compressed itself into rigid, tentative gestures” (p 42). What Tambu
expresses here is not a conscious attempt at self-discipline (“I danced”) but
rather something the “dancing” does to itself. She does not stop dancing,
since dance is a communal activity in her family and, as evidenced by
reactions to Nyasha’s and Chido’s failure to dance at the homestead (p 43),
it would be abnormal to avoid it. But Tambu no longer takes the same
pleasure in her body for herself for some time afterward.
Tambu’s decision to continue dancing, albeit in “rigid, tentative gestures,”
is characteristic of her strategy for resolving the conflicts of being a female
body in the post-colony. She perceives that there are contexts and social
relations that she must attend to if she is to survive: “I was always aware of
my surroundings. When the surroundings were new and unfamiliar, the
awareness was painful and made me behave very strangely. At times like
that I wanted so badly to disappear that for practical purposes I ceased to
exist” (Dangarembga, 1988, p 112). As she learns what is expected of her,
she finds the easiest way to negotiate those expectations is to make herself
smaller—like the compression of her dancing—so that she can participate
normally without drawing attention to her own feelings or desires. Tambu’s
desire to make herself disappear is a poignant reflection of how the problem
of being a colonized woman, constantly under erasure between gender and
race, becomes embodied. She literally experiences her body as one that
must disappear in order to resolve the tensions of colonized womanhood.
In so doing, Tambu’s disappearance from her knowing self might suggest a
Cartesian split, a mind–body dualism, where the mind confronts a reality
where her native body cannot be in its natural state. Considered in the light of
the distinction that Leder (1990) makes between the “ecstatic” and “recessive”
body, whereby pleasure and pain respectively expand or contract the body’s
capacity for self-recognition, it is far more likely that Tambu’s “dys-appearing
body” is keenly aware of pain and pleasure and bends to accommodate the
environment it inhabits. Leder writes, “As ecstatic [pleasure], the body
projects outside itself into the world. As recessive [pain], the body falls back
from its conscious perception and control” (1990, p 169). Tambu’s innocent
pleasure as she dances for herself can be seen as the ecstatic body expanding
its sense of freedom with each rhythmic movement. As she becomes aware of
the disapproving gaze of her family members, the ecstatic body recedes—she
becomes more self-conscious and the recessive body intrudes, bringing her
movements in line with the expectations of social control.
The contrast between Tambu’s and Nyasha’s negotiation of pleasure is
one of the most marked differences between them. If at times they are
almost twins, at other times their embodied experience demonstrates both
different understandings of the limits and possibilities of their bodies and
the different strategies for surviving colonialism that these generate. At a
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school dance, Nyasha dances with Andy, a wealthy white Rhodesian boy,
and lingers with him in the driveway when they return home. The innocent
circumstance becomes a trigger for a violent showdown between father and
daughter, in which he beats her mercilessly and she, refusing to be docile,
fights back. Babamukuru’s concerns about how it might seem if a daughter
of his is seen or thought to behave in sexually inappropriate ways are heavily
tied to his sense of himself as a model colonial subject. Nyasha, who intuits
the absurdity of her father’s investment in colonial norms, is more acutely
aware than Tambu that the requirement placed upon her to discipline her
own body’s sensations and needs is demanded of her in the name of colonial
patriarchy. It is an awareness she has gained through her education. It is,
however, a demand she utterly rejects.
As the fight between father and daughter subsides, however, Babamukuru
warns that Nyasha’s audacity in fighting back will lead to her death because
“we cannot have two men in this house” (Dangarembga, 1988, p 117).
The colonial Christianity that has structured Babamukuru’s existence turns
into a grave for the colonized woman: if she tries to inhabit the same space
as the colonized man, she risks death. A phenomenological reading of
Nyasha’s conflict suggests that while colonial Christianity has structured her
education and liberation, it also has produced in her a dissident body with
modernizing notions of female selfhood that threaten African patriarchy
and must be subject to control.
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enact gender hierarchies—one in which men are served first, for example,
and women and children make do with what is leftover. Babamukuru insists
that everyone act in accordance with his rules, and even though Nyasha’s
capacity to question, if not defy, his rules is evident, she is not as divested
from his rules as she seems. Her disordered eating intensifies when she is
under pressure to succeed in her studies, an internal conflict that occurs
at least partly because she senses that her success satisfies Babamukuru’s
colonial ideals. Her academic success vindicates his strategy of colonial
obedience, but it also means that her intellect, the very thing that allows
her to challenge Babamukuru’s thinking, is compromised. She undertakes
a strategy of overcompliance with his authority, as Tambu witnesses on one
of her visits back to the mission.
She sat down very quietly and that was the beginning of a horribly
weird and sinister drama. Babamukuru dished out a large helping of
food for his daughter and set it before her, watching her surreptitiously
as he picked casually at his own meal to persuade us he was calm.
Nyasha regarded her plate malevolently, darting anguished glances
at her father, drained two glasses of water, then picked up her fork
and shovelled food into her mouth, swallowing without chewing.
(Dangarembga, 1988, p 202)
Having disciplined her body to swallow what the social order demands, she
immediately retreats to the bathroom to throw up everything she has eaten,
refusing to absorb or digest it. Despite the spectacle of compliance, she loses
weight, becomes frail, and passes out at the dinner table one evening, but
this still does not drive her parents to consult a doctor. As with Tambu’s
desire to disappear, the fact that Nyasha is apparently ever more compliant
and literally takes up less and less space is not in itself a problem in the body
of a colonized woman. It is, instead, her expression of both violent rage and
despair that finally pierces the family’s denial:
Nyasha was beside herself with fury. She rampaged, shredding her
history book between her teeth (“Their history. Fucking liars. Their
bloody lies”), breaking mirrors, her clay pots, anything she could lay
her hands on and jabbing the fragments viciously into her flesh. ...
“They’ve trapped us. They’ve trapped us. But I won’t be trapped. I’m
not a good girl. I won’t be trapped.” Then as suddenly as it came, the
rage passed. “I don’t hate you Daddy,” she said softly. “They want me
to, but I won’t.” She lay down on her bed. “I’m very tired,” she said
in a voice that was recognisably hers. “But I can’t sleep. Mummy will
you hold me?” She curled up in Maiguru’s lap looking no more than
five years old. “Look what they’ve done to us,” she said softly, “I’m not
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one of them but I’m not one of you.” She fell asleep. (Dangarembga,
1988, p 205)
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for the colonized woman. Contact with colonial education dissolves some
capacities even as it develops others.
At first, only Tambu’s body is able to manifest this understanding: “I found
I could not get out of bed. I tried several times but my muscles simply refused
the half-hearted commands I was issuing to them” (Dangarembga, 1988,
p 168). There is even a suggestion that she knows she is only pretending,
a remnant of the part of Tambu that desperately tries to govern her body
according to her uncle’s rules, but the appearance of Babamukuru himself
at her bedside does not result in any change. Tambu, now narrating the
experience as if she were outside her body, notices that “the body on the
bed did not twitch” (p 168). Nevertheless, she continues: “Meanwhile,
the mobile me, the alert me, the one at the foot of the bed, smiled smugly,
thinking I had gone somewhere he could not reach me, and I congratulated
myself for being so clever” (p 168). At last, instead of disappearing as a
response to colonial gendering, Tambu takes herself elsewhere, leaving her
body behind to deceive others. The splitting of her body continues while
Maiguru and Babamukuru discuss her condition, but she cannot sustain
this displacement: “I slipped back into my body. I found I could speak
again” (p 169). Finding herself back in her body, Tambu asserts, for the first
time, that she does not want to go to the wedding. As with his reaction to
Nyasha’s supposed indecency, Babamukuru responds to this challenge to his
authority with physical punishment. Yet Tambu is able to endure it. Unlike
her mother and her cousin, she redoubles her control over her body “with
a deep and grateful masochistic delight” (p 171). She explains: “To me that
punishment was the price of my newly acquired identity” (p 171). Tambu
does not destroy herself but instead cultivates a capacity to enjoy the pain.
Although, like Nyasha, her bodily refusal does not help her to recover what
she has lost, she learns a different way of surviving in the colony, and it is
this strategy that carries her toward the conclusion of the novel—it indicates
Tambu’s agency in being able to pass between the recessive and ecstatic body
state and negotiate between “presence” and “dys-appearance” (Leder, 1990).
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colonial discipline, the signs are all around Tambu that she has not arrived at
the better place she had imagined and that others who have tried to acquire
a colonial education before her have not fared any better. Nyasha, as we
saw in detail earlier, suffers a breakdown, causing Tambu to wonder: “If
Nyasha who had everything could not make it, where could I expect to
go?” (p 206). Indeed, whether or not Nyasha will survive remains unclear
at the conclusion of the novel. Ma’Shingayi diagnoses the “Englishness”
Tambu is learning as the ultimate threat, the thing that is killing Nyasha
and might kill Tambu, too, if she is not careful. The last page of the novel is
crystallized by Ma’Shingayi’s diagnosis, which Tambu finally acknowledges
as an important and real understanding of colonialism’s effects on the lives
of the women she loves. The triumph that began the chapter dissolves into
a genuine moment of postcolonial awareness: “Although I was not aware
of it then, no longer could I accept Sacred Heart and what it represented as
a sunrise on my horizon” (p 208). Tambu has arrived at her goal, but she is
also beginning to understand that within the colonial order of things, the
goal itself might be the trap.
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Nyasha has an intuition, perhaps from her earlier contact with the
postcolonial metropole, that she must not tolerate any attempts to make
her disappear. Instead, she experiments with her body in a chaotic but
determined way, sometimes complying with the demand to be a “good
native girl” in a way that also damages her body. Like her cousin Tambu, she
recognizes the colonial demand to appear and disappear as a young woman
whenever it is asked of her, but she refuses to understand that demand as a
reasonable one. In Nyasha’s analysis, colonial education might still hold out
the possibility of escape from colonialization if it also allows her to remake
the contours of trajectories that have been shaped to fit the bodies of men
like Babamukuru, Nhamo, and Chido.
To argue, as we have, that gender is a colonial construct is to draw attention
to the multiple ways in which the colonial architecture is built for and
imagines racialized male bodies, just as the feminist response to colonial
power has been built for and imagines gendered white bodies. Living in such
a world has brought young women like the fictional Tambu and Nyasha to
experience a nervous condition of their own, in which they try to understand
how they could enjoy, make use of, exceed, and care for their unimagined
bodies, bodies that neither the colonial nor postcolonial worlds have yet
been shaped to hold. We all live in nervous conditions: caught between
consciousness and the limits of our immediate realities. The difference is
that some of us cannot describe our realities in a way that is understood as
real, material, and consequential because gender and race are continually
separated out as separate threads of a deeply interwoven fabric. It is in this
wakeful state that we recognize gender on the post-colony as an ambivalent,
constantly negotiated, reinterpretative activity of being, becoming, existing,
surviving. By resurfacing the phenomenology of the Black female body, we
are able to witness these artful forms of resistance.
Note
1
We do not have space here to provide a more detailed comparison of social constructionism
and phenomenology (nor is it opportune, since this would detract from the emphasis
on Black feminist voices), but the contrasts between the two approaches to the body
and theories of self are important when we consider how histories are interpreted, how
stories of self are told, and by whom they are told.
References
Adler, A. (1964) The Individual Psychology of Alfred Adler, New York: Harper
Torchbooks.
Bahri, D. (1994) ‘Disembodying the corpus: postcolonial pathology in Tsitsi
Dangarembga’s Nervous Conditions’, Postmodern Culture, 5(1), available from:
https://www.pomoculture.org/2013/09/24/disembodying-the-corpus-
postcolonial-pathology-in-tsitsi-dangarembgas-nervous-conditions/.
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106
Gender on the Post-colony
107
Interpreting the Body
108
5
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110
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111
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my research on men and the war on obesity. By covering these points, I aim
to further the broader editorial remit of this volume to interpret human
bodies, with reference to a specific field of health (practice). In so doing,
and as will be elaborated upon in the remainder of the chapter, I seek to
advance an embodied sociological approach that scrutinizes social structures
and processes that exceed, while affecting, fleshy bodies.
Critics of the war on obesity acknowledge that there are weight extremes,
at both ends of the light–heavy continuum, wherein certain health risks
are amplified (eg, Campos, 2004, 2011; Campos et al, 2006). However,
their general argument is that this fight is “off target” and the “cure” may
be worse than the “condition.” An important lesson from this literature
is that an ostensibly well-meaning project to slim down the population
not only is ineffective but has many unintended negative consequences.
Problems include reinforcing the idea that certain body shapes and sizes
are unacceptable, fueling disordered eating and other harmful weight-
loss practices, and promoting individualistic rather than social-structural
interventions that may amplify health inequalities (Evans et al, 2008).
Accordingly, critics argue that obesity discourse must be challenged and even
rejected in favor of a more holistic and socially just approach that prioritizes
health and well-being rather than weight (Bombak et al, 2019; Aphramor, 2020).
Body materiality and biomedical concerns are not necessarily rejected by
those who challenge the war on obesity. Indeed, conscientious objectors in
the health professions include critical dieticians who advocate Health-At-
Every-Size (HAES®), a weight-neutral approach that aims to measurably
improve metabolic health and well-being through behavioral change.
HAES® is by no means perfect. For example, practitioners have been urged
to avoid reproducing nutritionism and “healthism” (Crawford, 1980) where
food and lifestyle “choices” become a panacea for problems that are beyond
individual control (Brady et al, 2013). However, rather than becoming
“administrators” in the weight-loss business, a subtype of “obesity epidemic
entrepreneur” (Monaghan et al, 2010), HAES® practitioners reject the
WCHP in favor of what they consider to be a more ethical, inclusive, and
effective approach (Aphramor and Gingras, 2011; Bacon and Aphramor,
2011, 2014). HAES® principles include intuitive eating, taking joy in bodily
movement, and respecting one’s body and its treatment. Those supporting
HAES® also encourage an understanding of and resistance to size-ism, or
stigma and other forms of discrimination directed at “fat people.” More
radically, with their Well Now project, Aphramor (2020), a former HAES®
advocate, seeks to challenge the architecture of an individualizing lifestyle-
oriented or behavioral approach to health. Their challenge is articulated via
a focus on structural issues, including white supremacy and the embodied
consequences of trauma in oppressive societies. When questioning the
public health focus on obesity, other critics have recently attempted to
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(2004) writes that while Brad Pitt would be deemed overweight on the
BMI, Jennifer Aniston would have to gain approximately 55 pounds in
order to have the same BMI (implying she would likely be perceived as
“fat,” or at least “too big” or “heavy” and thus unattractive according to
normative ideals of femininity). Other actors, such as Russell Crowe, would
be classed as obese. In short, everyday perceptions of overweight/obesity
are gendered in ways that typically enable men to accommodate “larger”
bodies and be viewed by others as acceptable, if not desirable (similarly, see
Bergman, 2009). This gendered inequality in body norms has long been
challenged by feminist scholars when arguing that “societal disapproval of
fatness” mainly hurts women (Wiles, 1994, p 33).
Yet, as suggested earlier, men do not necessarily escape weight-related
harms. While normative male embodiment may incorporate a range of
acceptable shapes and sizes, “big fellas” (Monaghan, 2008) are not immune
from fat oppression. Indeed, respondents in my research shared hurtful
insights on forms of surveillance, domination, and symbolic violence.
Large male bodies were, metaphorically speaking, “shot at” from numerous
directions, for example, clinicians who labeled them “obese” (itself an
offensive term to laity), wives who “nagged” them and refused to have sex
until they lost weight, abrasive remarks from parents, and so forth. Most
men understandably wanted to become smaller targets, even if that meant
entering a traditionally woman-centered weight-loss group. Certainly,
there were culturally circumscribed limits to their weight-loss efforts,
noted earlier with reference to their expressed distance from the BMI. Such
responses might irk health promoters. However, rather than correcting
laymen who dismissed medicalized weight-for-height measures, Monaghan
(2007) reported and honored their justifications for levels of body mass that
medicine labels too heavy (implicitly or explicitly too fat). Justifications
included the compatibility of heaviness, healthiness, and physical fitness
(eg, some elite sportsmen, such as world-class rugby players, are technically
obese); looking and feeling ill at a supposedly “healthy” BMI; and resisting
irrational standardization amid bodily diversity. One conclusion from this
research is that while men often seek accommodation within a symbolic
system of masculine domination wherein feminine and feminizing fat must
be combated, there remains a broader politicized need to challenge the war
on obesity wherein women and children are typically less able to shield
themselves. For instance, women and girls with a BMI ≥ 25 kg/m² (ie, what
medicine calls overweight) cannot justify their size with appeals to robust
models of masculine physicality. Arguably, important life events may help
mitigate societal disapproval of women’s fatness, such as pregnancy (Wiles,
1994), though the increasing degree to which medicine defines maternal
weight as risky for the unborn also needs to be reckoned with here (Bombak
et al, 2016).
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et al (2014, p 53) note how the “big bang” financial deregulation of 1986
led to “substantial increases in socioeconomic and health inequalities [that]
were effectively marginalized and ignored by [Thatcher’s] government.”
Other aspects, such as the depoliticizing emphasis upon the individual
and the rolling back of the welfare state, have also had a notable impact on
UK health policy. Such policy, following US-based psychological models
of behavioral intervention, is blinkered insofar as it neglects social context.
Ong et al (2014, p 227) trace such policy making from the 1990s, adding
that from 2010 the economic rationale for the “self-management” of patients
gained momentum “against the backdrop of financial austerity and reductions
in public sector funding.” Under such conditions, politicized concerns to
address macrostructural factors affecting public health tend to be sidelined
by a myopic focus on irresponsible (overweight) neoliberal subjects who
are allegedly culpable for their own ills. This is an instance of scapegoating,
a blame game directed at multiple “soft” targets such as single mothers, the
unemployed, immigrants, and public sector workers who purportedly cost
too much for the system (O’Flynn et al, 2014). Such maneuvers have been
dissected within critical public health scholarship with reference to a “stigma
system,” wherein scapegoating works as a “divide-and-rule” strategy for the
powerful (Friedman et al, 2022).
In short, individual level approaches have ideological appeal and currency
under historically transmitted social conditions, with health policy typically
emphasizing behavioral change as an antidote to people’s presumptively
“maladaptive” activities (Ong et al, 2014, p 229), bodies, and “lack of
preparedness” for infectious pandemics. However, in siding with the Black
Report (DHSS, 1980), medical sociologists have explained health inequalities
largely in terms of people’s material conditions of existence (for cogent
analytical work that melds materialist concerns with a multidimensional
focus on the lived body, see Williams, 2003). The materialist approach draws
attention to working environments and labor markets (eg, job insecurity, low
pay, reduced pension provision, and unemployment), housing, healthcare,
social infrastructure, and related concerns such as affordable transportation
that facilitates networks of interdependency and connection. For medical
sociologists such as Scambler (2018), it is crucial to recognize the fundamental
contradictions of capitalism and antagonistic class relations when offering a
materialist explanation for health inequity. If behaviors are to be accorded
any weight, then there is a case for arguing that attention should be directed
upward. That is, rather than focusing on the behaviors of people in poorer
socioeconomic circumstances (as often happens in state-funded research),
attention needs to be directed toward the illness behaviors of the rich and
powerful whose search for profits largely takes priority over public health
and well-being. Here critics acknowledge that common cultural/behavioral
factors contribute to health inequalities, for instance, higher rates of smoking
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among lower socioeconomic groups. However, the crucial point is that such
behaviors are indebted to social structures; “personal choices” are shaped
and constrained by material circumstances. As observed in Graham’s (1994)
research on women and smoking, and in Williams et al’s (1995) study
on health beliefs in a deprived English inner city, feelings of segregation,
poverty, exclusion, hopelessness, and powerlessness influence people’s health
behaviors and outcomes.
While debates about health tend to be moralized and conflated with
individualized concerns (eg, personal failure, shame, blame, and correction),
it is clear from the foregoing discussion that hegemonic narratives are also
subject to considerable contestation and reframing. In line with the “social
justice frame” (Kwan and Graves, 2013), which is politicized and challenges
inequity, I will finish this section by making further connections with critical
perspectives on men, masculinities, and health. Scholars in this field have,
over the past two decades, made inroads on a complex and contested terrain
(Scott-Samuel et al, 2009; Gough and Robertson, 2010; Gottzén et al,
2019). Relevant themes include the differential effects of unemployment
on men’s and women’s mortality, especially for men in their early-to mid-
career, and dramatic increases in male suicide during the latter part of the
twentieth century, which has been linked to growing income inequality
and instability in heterosexual relationships (for a review, see Robertson and
Monaghan, 2012). Disability, embodiment, and masculinity also constitute
a complex matrix of investigation, with attention recently paid to themes
such as technology and neoliberal logics that render many bodies and
lives dispensable (ie, the impaired and chronically ill who are systemically
disadvantaged by a competitive work-orientated system) (Robertson et al,
2019). However, rather than detail this burgeoning literature I will limit
myself to two insightful contributions that promote critical thinking about
the material/structural conditions that shape and constrain life chances and
health. In keeping with my preceding arguments, I will flag literature that
challenges the sort of alarmism that would have us believe that individual
“laymen” are their own worst enemies and are endangering or burdening
others when, for instance, their actions result in poor health outcomes
that (purportedly) drain already overstretched health services. More
specifically, I will draw from Lohan’s (2010) and Robertson and Williams’
(2010) insights on men’s health. These writings are noteworthy because
they integrate diverse theorization and connect health problems to social
structures and processes more so than men’s individual attitudes, behaviors,
or psychological predispositions.
Lohan (2010) explains that the “critical studies on men” (CSM) literature
often prompts health service providers to simply focus on the goal of modifying
service delivery and education in an effort to change men’s attitudes, lifestyles,
their uptake of such services, and their health outcomes. Unfortunately, this
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means that health service providers often lack an “awareness of the relational
power context of gender relations” and an appreciation of “the embeddedness
of men’s gendered health practices in broader sets of structured inequalities
in society” (pp 14–15). For Lohan, “[i]t is precisely this embeddedness” that
necessitates CSM to engage “the broader inequalities in health literature”
(p 15). Consequently, she moves the spotlight onto power, outlining how
theories that explain material inequalities (alongside other theories, such
as cultural/behavioral and lifecourse approaches) might be integrated into
CSM in future research. For instance, while structural explanations have been
underutilized in studies on men’s health, Lohan makes a good case for redressing
that issue, not only when considering health differences between groups of
men but also when considering how materialist relations between men and
women exert their effects. Accordingly, the goal is to “tease out the interactions
between class and gender in men and women’s health” (p 17). I would also add
“children” to Lohan’s proposition in order to overcome possible accusations of
an adult-centric bias, alongside other intersecting axes of power (eg, ethnicity
and sexuality) that pattern population health (see Part 1 of Monaghan and
Gabe, 2022). Furthermore, when interrogating broader structures and their
effects on health, critical attention should be directed at forms of exploitation,
oppression, and domination as emergent properties of a historically unfolding
world-system. Whether theorized in terms of the inherent contradictions of
capitalism (Scambler, 2018) and/or masculine domination (Bourdieu, 2001;
for Bourdieu’s neglect of feminism here, see Connell, 2007), a key message is
this: real social structures matter and their effects should not be misrecognized
as individual pathology (bad behavior, fatness).
Robertson and Williams (2010) similarly advance critical knowledge
of social structures as part of an explicitly embodied approach to men’s
health and health promotion. Revisiting some of their previous qualitative
research, they challenge the media-fueled myth that “all men are irresponsible
when it comes to self-care and promoting their health” (Robertson and
Williams, 2010, p 48). Refuting essentialist constructions that locate men’s
health problems within their biology or “the male psyche” (p 49), these
authors challenge health promotion ideologies that all too easily reiterate
the centrality of individual responsibility and the need for behavioral
change. Flagging the limitations of public health and health promotion,
their contribution unpicks “normative conceptualisations of ‘health’ and
‘healthy lifestyle’” with reference to men’s own accounts. Importantly, they
retain an eye on “issues of social justice and social determinants [of health]
without denying the importance of men’s agency” (p 49). After outlining
dominant biomedical constructions of health—and the salience of “risk,”
“behaviors,” and “lifestyles” within epidemiologically inspired discourses—
Robertson and Williams urge readers to regard men’s departures from
healthist prescriptions as not necessarily acts of resistance (in the Foucauldian
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sense) but pragmatic enactments that make sense within given social contexts
(eg, smoking among stressed workers as a release from an extremely hectic
schedule). These authors, drawing from Bourdieu and other theorists (eg,
Lupton and Crawford), conceptualize men’s enactments in terms of “a logic
of practice” that is embedded within specific “social locations.” Empirically,
respondents juggled notions concerning “good citizenship” and hegemonic
masculine discourses wherein men “cannot be seen to be too concerned
about ‘health’ (feminine) issues” (Robertson and Williams, 2010, pp 54–
55). One conclusion here is that both compliance and noncompliance
to “lifestyle advice” do not occur in a social vacuum. Accordingly, such
action must be understood in terms of men’s intersubjective meanings
and, more broadly, socially structured requirements wherein control
and release are basic “requirements of contemporary capitalism” (p 57).
Attentive to the physicality of the lived body, Robertson and Williams also
underscore men’s embodiment, taking the materiality of social structures
plus human corporeality into account. And, the dialectics of such processes
are underscored in context: social agents are “corporeal, physical bodies,
which are affected within the inequitable social arrangements generated and
fostered through neo-liberal politics” (p 58).
In sum, health is affected by many factors. However, within medicalized
Western culture, there is a common emphasis on lifestyles/behaviors as
inferred from the size, shape, and weight of the physical body. While there is
no suggestion within critical weight studies that behaviors are unimportant
and all “fat people” are necessarily healthy, there is, as per some of the medical
sociology and men’s health studies literature cited earlier, recognition of the
larger context that patterns health outcomes. At a minimum, what may be
taken from such writings is that social justice (and, by implication, gender
justice), alongside embodied human agency, matters when seeking to promote
healthier societies. This realization, in turn, means grappling with the social
collectivity, co-constituted by real flesh and blood bodies that are never
merely “targets” of medicalization, surveillance, correction, and control.
By extension, policies could be formulated in a manner that connects with
everyday meanings while also seeking to redress growing inequalities (especially
accelerating inequalities in wealth). Here, overriding emphasis could be given
to respectfully advancing health equity and shared well-being regardless of the
contingencies of an individual’s size, age, ethnicity, sex, or gender.
Concluding reflections
As explained by Robertson and Williams (2010), much about contemporary
masculinity remains anecdotal or misunderstood based on stereotypes.
Indeed, it is all too easy to reproduce myths of masculinity (Monaghan and
Atkinson, 2014), which include, among other things, the view that men and
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boys are a homogenous “toxic” class rather than a diverse body politic that
incorporates intersecting relations of power tied to economic status, ethnicity,
and other divisions. Hegemonic fabrications, including the latest round of
obesity alarmism, tend to construct male bodies as essentially problematic and
in need of targeting for health promotion or, more disturbingly, potentially
lethal forms of discipline and punishment. Taking as its point of departure
various representations of male bodies as inadequate, pathological, and risky,
this chapter sought to encourage a broader community of scholars and health
researchers/workers to reinterpret the field and those bodies of knowledge
that may inform debate and action.
To avoid potential misrecognition or misunderstanding, the basic rationale
I am offering when reinterpreting male bodies is not to celebrate men’s and
boys’ lives and practices, or, as with reactionary men’s studies, tell men that
they are OK (Lohan, 2010). In many circumstances, male bodies are clearly
under assault (Kehler and Atkinson, 2010). This, it should be stressed, is
within a gender order that is irreducible to individuals and which typically
rewards aggressive competitiveness, toughness, and one-upmanship (Scott-
Samuel et al, 2009). It is also a gender order wherein forms of public health
promotion, as seen in the war on obesity, threaten embodied masculinity
while simultaneously promising to recoup it—for example, the emasculated
idle fat man who is “targeted” within a militarized discourse but who may
“save” himself by “battling the bulge” (Monaghan, 2008). Rather than naively
reassure men and boys that all is well, my intention has been somewhat
different. My aim has been to challenge cultural clichés, stereotypes, and
one-dimensional accounts that fail to capture the complexity, messiness, and
embeddedness of people’s lives in a world where gender and intersecting
axes of power are embodied and exert their effects. Arguably, such a task
is vital given the urgency often ascribed to the problem of men’s and boys’
health (behaviors), with images of issues (obesity, among others) offering
a seemingly solid rationale for well-intentioned—if often misguided,
empirically uninformed, and ethically suspect—interventions (Monaghan
and Atkinson, 2014).
In addition to reviewing research on weight-related issues, the chapter aimed
to think “big” (systemically) when advancing critical perspectives on male
bodies and health. Such an approach should remain attentive to microlevel
concerns and agency, although, as illustrated by Robertson and Williams
(2010), Lohan (2010), and others (eg, Scott-Samuel et al, 2009), attention
should also be directed at broader structures of power and inequality. At a
time when capitalism has proven itself to be highly unstable, inequitable,
exploitative, and oppressive, calls from men’s health researchers to interrogate
the material conditions of existence and the politics of neoliberalism should
be heeded. In so doing, we better situate ourselves to connect with and help
expand other bodies of literature, such as sociological writings on health
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as well as the social conditions under which the war on weight/fat has
emerged and continues apace.
Acknowledgments
This chapter is a thoroughly revised and updated version of a previously
published article: Monaghan, L.F. (2015) ‘Critiquing masculinity myths:
rethinking male bodies, obesity and health in context’, International Journal of
Men’s Health, 14(3): 250–266. Monaghan would also like to thank the book’s
editors for their invitation and helpful suggestions when revising the chapter.
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Gard, M. and Wright, J. (2005) The Obesity Epidemic: Science, Morality and
Ideology, London: Routledge.
Germov, J. and Williams, L. (1999) ‘Dieting women: self-surveillance and
the body panopticon’, in J. Sobal and D. Maurer (eds) Weighty Issues: Fatness
and Thinness as Social Problems, New York: Aldine de Gruyter, pp 117–132.
Gilman, S. (2004) Fat Boys: A Slim Book, Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press.
Goffman, E. (1961) Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients
and Other Inmates, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
Goffman, E. (1968) Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity, Middlesex:
Penguin Books.
Gottzén, U., Mellström and T. Shefer (eds) (2019) Routledge International
Handbook of Masculinity Studies, London: Routledge.
Gough, B. (2010) ‘Promoting “masculinity” over health: a critical analysis of
men’s health promotion with particular reference to an obesity reduction
“manual”’, in B. Gough and S. Robertson (eds) Men, Masculinities and
Health, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp 125–142.
Gough, B. and Robertson, S. (eds) (2010) Men, Masculinities and Health,
Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Graham, H. (1994) ‘Surviving by smoking’, in S. Wilkinson and C. Kitzinger
(eds) Women and Health: Feminist Perspectives, London: Taylor and Francis,
pp 102–123.
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for men than women?’, The Conversation, May 12, available from: https://
theconversation.com/covid-19-is-obesity-really-more-of-a-r isk-f actor-
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6
Breast cancer is an ugly disease, visible on the surface of the body in garish
display. Yet the images we regularly see in the media are remarkably sanitized,
feminized, and beautified. In the standard imaginary, breast cancer is a
lump that you might feel but not see, an illustration of internal processes,
a highly edited image of tiny and uniform scars, or maybe an image from a
pathologist’s slide. Rarely depicted are the long (stretching from the middle
of the chest to under the armpit), jagged, or raised scars that are often the
reality of mastectomies.
The relative invisibility of mastectomy scars is part of what Dorothy Broom
(2001) refers to as the imperative of concealment. At the center of the
cultural framing of breast cancer is the notion that the disease fundamentally
disrupts femininity and ideals of feminine beauty through disfigurement of
the breasts (Potts, 2000; Broom, 2001; Crompvoets, 2003, 2006a, 2006b;
Ericksen, 2008; Sulik, 2011; Champagne, 2018). Repairing this disruption
to body and identity via attention to feminine beauty is infused in discourse
concerning breast cancer treatment, healing, and activism. Recovery
becomes linked to concealing the physical reality of breast cancer treatment
through beauty practices, including breast reconstruction. Mainstream
government programs,1 nonprofit programs, and organizations of medical
professionals provide resources and support to cisgender women as they
recover from breast cancer, with the sole focus of restoring a conventionally
feminine appearance centered on normative standards of beauty. Programs
such as the American Cancer Society’s “Reach to Recovery Program,” the
“Look Good Feel Better Program,” and BRA-Day International seek to
improve “self-image and appearance through … beauty sessions that create
a sense of support, confidence, courage, and community” (Look Good Feel
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between individual agency and the structure of gender that have played
out in feminist debates about beauty and cosmetic surgery (Davis, 1995,
2009; Gagné and McGaughey, 2002; Gimlin, 2002, 2013; Felski, 2006;
Furnham and Swami, 2007; Bordo, 2009; Stuart and Donaghue, 2011). In
Bordo’s (2009) assessment, all women are under a cultural imperative to be
beautiful, yet they also retain considerable agency and choice. She points
out the contradiction of the dual imperatives women experience to, on the
one hand, embrace “triumphant individualism” and, on the other hand,
conform to the normative ideologies of gender (Bordo, 2009, p 27). Even
as women who live flat insist that they make this choice in contradiction
of conventional beauty norms, these norms nevertheless remain integral to
their self-narratives.
The meaning and pursuit of beauty are at the heart of this deceptively
simplistic debate between social structures and individual agency, particularly
with respect to gender.3 The pursuit of beauty via surgery becomes a sign
of either individual autonomy or conformity to social pressure. Rita Felski
intervenes in this false dichotomy, arguing that there has been an evolution
in feminist understandings of beauty from “the rhetoric of victimization and
oppression to an alternative language of empowerment and resistance” (2006,
p 280). Beauty thus becomes a powerful discursive tool that can be deployed
in the construction of self-identity regardless of whether that identity
conforms to normative expectations or not. More specifically, attention to
beauty can make clear the complex relationship between individual agency
and the imperatives of gendered expectations. Rather than reifying a binary
debate between structure and agency where beauty can only be repressive,
the interpretation of beauty can be the path out of the dichotomy. Jennifer
Millard posits that beauty is achieved via the “manipulation of semiotic
resources, such as hair or skin to achieve desired ends” (2009, p 150).
Beauty, in this configuration, refers to practices that are informed by cultural
ideologies, a range of material resources and attributes, and personal choices
bounded by normative expectations of gender. Situating beauty at the nexus
of ideology, personal choice, and performance creates space for beauty to
encapsulate the empowerment and resistance that Felski describes.
As a dominant ideology and a discursive tool for resistance, beauty must be
decoded and reinterpreted, becoming a site for “disidentification” (Muñoz,
1999). José Esteban Muñoz defines disidentification as “descriptive of the
survival strategies” of those who do not conform to cultural norms (1999,
p 4). Importantly, he argues that disidentification “neither opts to assimilate
within such a structure nor strictly oppose it; rather, disidentification is a
strategy that works on and against dominant ideology” (p 11). Through
processes of disidentification, women who live flat are able to reinterpret
beauty in the service of resisting the pressures of cultural ideologies as well
as medical providers who may strongly promote breast reconstruction. In
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the narratives presented by women who live flat, breasts and their removal
become a semiotic resource for reinterpreting beauty. This reinterpretation
is achieved not only via relationships with other women who live flat but
also through interactions with supportive family and friends who bolster
women’s understandings of their mastectomized bodies as beautiful.
Methods
Data for this chapter come from the narratives of 19 mastectomized
cisgender women: 15 who chose contralateral mastectomies after a single
breast cancer diagnosis and flat closure, 1 participant who had a single
mastectomy after a breast cancer diagnosis with flat closure, and 3 women
who had bilateral mastectomies and flat closure after testing positive for
one of the BReast CAncer (BRCA) gene variants. The narrative data
discussed in this chapter are part of a larger study of the ways in which
normative expectations of gendered bodies shape the experience of breast
and gynecological cancer care (Sledge, 2019, 2021).4 The women whose
stories are presented here ranged in age from 32 to 70 at the time of the
interviews (age at diagnosis ranged from 24 to 63). Some received their
diagnosis decades before the interviews took place while others had been
diagnosed within the previous year (interviews took place between 2012
and 2015). Three women were single, and the rest were married (some
married to men and others to women). Nearly all women had some
college education, and most were white. This was a group of people
with relative social privilege and resources. These women occupy social
locations from which normative standards of beauty have been historically
derived (Strings, 2019).
Participants largely learned about my project through the filter of online
communities designed to support women who live flat. Victoria Pitts-T aylor
(2001, 2004) posits that because the internet represents a disembodied
space, individuals may have greater freedom to perform their identities,
thus opening space for resistance to the common narratives of breast cancer
presented by the media and breast cancer activism. Although Pitts-Taylor
recognizes that cyberspace is not free of gender norms, the prominence of
online communities for breast cancer survivors helps to create new discursive
spaces for positively interpreting one’s body, gender, and sexuality after
mastectomy (Crompvoets, 2003; Doh and Pompper, 2015; La et al, 2017).
I began the interviews by asking women to imagine that they were
writing a story (ie, a novel or a memoir), a movie script, or a theater
script about their experience of breast cancer and then to describe the
opening scene. Interviews unfolded from this point at the direction of the
women sharing their experiences. My questions consisted of clarifying
questions about timelines, relationships to people mentioned, or for specific
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examples/details. I did not specifically ask women about their ideas about
beauty. Rather, the exploration of this topic emerged as a pattern directed
by women themselves. After transcribing the interviews and identifying
patterns in the way they spoke about beauty and aesthetics, I turned back to
feminist scholarship on beauty and cosmetic surgery, as well as to symbolic
interactionist literature, to situate these narratives in ongoing feminist
debates and begin to understand the various contexts that appear to support
women’s reinterpretations of their bodies outside of the normative frames of
“accountability” (West and Zimmerman, 1987) that typically shape behaviors
(Hsieh and Shannon, 2005).
Reinterpreting beauty
The stories in this chapter question taken-for-g ranted assumptions that
underpin breast cancer care—namely the imperative of concealment
and the belief that a singular understanding of beauty is the pinnacle of
recovery. Furthermore, these stories question our cultural conflation of
normative feminine beauty with health (Litva et al, 2001; Berlant, 2010;
Klein, 2010) and indicate that beauty has the potential for much greater
complexity and multiplicity than our rigid, gendered norms allow. Women
who live flat described two linked premises that emerged organically in
their narratives, and which represent the interpretive filters that facilitate
women’s reinterpretations of their bodies and redefinitions of beauty.
First, they rejected the predominant discourse of disfigurement. As Kate
(age 46, PhD, straight, married) stated, “I don’t go around thinking that
I am deformed. But I am not formed the way other women are, and I do
not choose what to wear or what not to wear based on trying to hide
the fact that I don’t have breasts.” Second, they rejected the notion that
reconstructed breasts were beautiful and the most appropriate pathway to
psychosocial healing. The statement of another participant, Edie (age 50,
bachelor’s degree, straight, married), is representative of the sentiment of
many women I spoke with:
The first thing I did was to go look for reconstructed boobs on the
internet. … I started looking at these things [images of postmastectomy
breast reconstruction] and I’m like, holy shit, because, to my way of
thinking, this stuff looked horrific. I mean, we cancer ladies, we like
to call them “Frankenboobies.”
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You know, the sheer number of women who go through four, five, and
six surgeries, and we’re not talking minor things, just to have boobs.
It’s hard for me to relate to that. … This one friend of mine had a
meter of incisions so that she could have reconstruction from her own
body tissue. A meter! A meter of incisions. I find that unfathomable.
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I just like my muscles the way they are. Actually, that’s a huge piece
of my body image. … I am a competitive athlete. … I am scrawny
enough that the only reconstruction they could have done would’ve
been the expanders. And do not mess with my pecs, thank you very
much. You know, alternatively, if I had had the body fat, I wouldn’t
have wanted my core disturbed for a TRAM.6 I would not have wanted
someone to play with my lats. And breasts are so much less important
to me than having the integrity of my muscles.
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If you have an amputated leg you want a prosthetic, so that you can walk.
It’s not a question of trying to appear as if you have a leg. … I do think
breasts have a functionality, but it’s a different kind of functionality. …
If it’s simply a question of appearing as if you still have boobs, they serve
that purpose. And that’s really the only purpose they serve.
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size was DD—and I’m 5’2.” And, as an artist, I can say without qualm
that symmetry is important to me. … I would love to see the shape
of breasts on my body, but, no, I am unwilling to do what it takes
to have that. … I’m unwilling to move tissue from this place to that
in order to, I don’t know, conform. And I do feel that it is an issue
of conformity.
As Catherine decided how she wanted to proceed after her breast cancer
diagnosis, symmetry was the main consideration. This was bolstered by
her fervent resistance to undergoing lengthy surgeries to reconstruct via
autologous tissue reconstruction. Edie also rooted her aesthetic concerns
in an artistic sensibility:
I come from a long line of artisans and artists and architects. So, I’m not
an artist myself, but I am very visual. I like to draw and knit and sew
and paint and whatever. And how things look is important to me—and
not from a vanity point of view. It’s different from just vanity, okay.
You know, I don’t wear makeup. I don’t care that I have wrinkles, for
example, but certain things, especially shapes.
Ellen (age 56, bachelor’s degree, straight, married) also referenced vanity
in expressing her personal disdain for reconstructed breasts. She explains,
“There’s no feeling. They’re ugly. You don’t get your nipple, you know,
so what’s the point of having boobs for vanity purposes?” Ellen’s statement
highlights reconstructed breasts’ lack of functionality. Holding onto an
understanding of beauty that is outside the standard narrative, she refuses
the narrative that reconstruction is beautiful and suggests that adhering to
this narrative is a matter of vanity.
For Ellen and Edie, vanity means accountability to normative standards
of female beauty and to the imperative of concealment. Having aesthetic
concerns or a desire to be beautiful is understood as separate from these
norms and pressures. The distinction that these women are making centers
on their understanding that reconstruction signifies vanity and capitulation to
the normative pressures of cultural expectations (what West and Zimmerman
[1987] would attribute to “accountability”). The women who live flat
emphasize instead a commitment to matters of integrity and authenticity,
states of embodied honesty, wholeness, symmetry, and the restoration of
an embodied sense of self that could not be achieved had they undergone
breast reconstruction (see Throsby, 2008; Shildrick, 2010). These are
the characteristics that serve as the foundation for beauty in the context
of living flat. It is important to note that symmetry here is not achieved
through additive means (ie, breast reconstruction or the use of prosthetics).
Rather, women who live flat describe symmetry as inextricably linked
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Scars as beautiful
The in/visibility of mastectomy scars was a crucial embodied experience
for women in this study. Within breast cancer activism culture, scars may be
emblematic of survival or may be difficult reminders of disease and mortality
(Lorde, 1997; Jain, 2007). These framings of scars are not unique to breast
cancer. Rose Weitz, for example, conceptualizes scars as a mark of bodily
vulnerability and resilience and argues that in constructing narratives about
scars, people “‘perform’ a new self ” and, in so doing, “turn first to culturally
available frames even as they may use their new embodied knowledge to
challenge or broaden those frames” (2011, pp 192–193). In this study, women
who live flat engage in precisely this type of narrative work to reinterpret
their scars and their bodies after mastectomy. As previously described, beauty
as a proxy for the restoration of femininity is a key narrative frame for breast
cancer recovery. Women who live flat adopt this frame but shift its meanings
in order to include flat, scarred chests.
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Samantha (age 57, bachelor’s degree, lesbian, married) was clear about the
aesthetics of her bilateral mastectomy:
She went on to distinguish the beauty of her scarred body from the image
popularized in the media and by physicians.
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Family interactions
The importance of family expectations, relationships, and support structures
is a central feature of women’s narratives. In this section, I focus specifically
on relationships to children and to intimate partners (husbands, wives,
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A friend of a friend was saying how she hadn’t told her kids [about her
mastectomy] and was having to wear this thing [a prosthetic] all the
time so that they wouldn’t notice a difference, and I thought, that’s
not our family. [laughs] You know, that’s kind of silly.
For Fran, flat closure was an obvious choice because of her personal feelings
about her body, and because she knew that she did not need to conceal the
reality of her surgeries from her husband and son. After deciding on bilateral
mastectomy and flat closure, Fran told her husband and son (who was 12 at the
time). Her husband, Fran explains, “just decided whatever was my decision,
that’s what it should be. [And if] that would make me full of happiness,
because I would not worry any longer, then that’s what I should do. So, it
was great [laughs].” For Fran, this reaction was perfectly in character for her
family members and was exactly the kind of support she needed to live flat. In
fact, her son often asked questions that further supported her flatness. In one
example, Fran described getting dressed for a wedding and wearing prosthetic
breasts to help fill out her dress. As she was getting dressed her son asked why
she was wearing the prosthetics and she explained that it would make the
dress look better. Her son responded, “Well, it’s kind of, like, fake.” In this
example, it’s evident the ways that Fran’s family aligned with her refusal to
conceal the fact of her surgery and even, in the case of her son, encouraged
her to avoid appearing “fake” through the use of prosthetic breasts.
Judy (age 50, degree status unknown, straight, married) also found support
in her teenage daughter. “[My daughter] accepted it [her flatness], and now
… I’ll ask her opinion: ‘How do I look in this? … Can you tell I have no
boobs?’ [Her daughter replies,] ‘Mom, would you quit obsessing about your
boobs?’” Here, the imperative of concealment is apparent, but by answering
her mother’s question indirectly, Judy’s daughter not only puts the imperative
of concealment into perspective, she also dismisses it out of hand.
What is striking about the preceding parent–child exchanges is the way that
the acceptance of teenage children, as well as the ways that they interact with
parents who live flat, helps to normalize women’s postmastectomy bodies.
The support of preteen and teenage children was unique and important.
Other women who live flat described some of the difficulty younger children
had in understanding not just living flat but the realities of breast cancer
treatment. Teenagers not only have different developmental capacities for
understanding this context, they also have a cultural reputation for being a bit
critical of parents and very attuned to matters of bodily conformity. Against
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I told him at one point, after researching, that I had more or less
decided that I probably would never get reconstruction. I asked him if
it bothered him in any way. And he said, “Oh, for God’s sakes!” And
then he said, “Look, I would prefer you don’t have reconstruction.”
He’s shit-scared of anesthesia; he doesn’t like me put under.
Proximity to queerness
Catherine attributed her approach to her husband and to her body after
mastectomy to her experiences dating women before meeting and marrying
her husband.
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The only other lesbian I know who had a prophylactic surgery also
did not have reconstruction. … [S]o many women feel, like, the loss
of [feminine] identity when they lose their breasts. And I don’t know
if that has as much to do with them or, like, the people that they are
with—if, you know, so many women talk about being a disappointment
to their husband.
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I’ve seen that there’s similarities going on [between living flat and
being LGBT]. … At one point I was asked [by a friend], after having
both breasts removed, if I would have my body painted in front of an
LGBT group because they have—that group had problems with self-
image. … [I]was there to show people that regardless of what your
body is going through you can still be whole. There was one [person]
who is going through all the processes to become a woman—so, [this
person] is transgender and was intrigued by looking at somebody with
no breasts and no nipples at all. And [she] said to me, “Wow! You
know, I thought being a woman really identified with breasts.” And
I said, “No, not in my case it doesn’t.”
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Conclusion
In this chapter, I contend that beauty is a site of disidentification through
which women who live flat can understand their mastectomized bodies in
ways that resist expectations that women should have breasted bodies, that
beauty requires breasts, and that bodies without breasts cannot be beautiful.
What these narratives leave intact is the notion that beauty is an important
part of recovering from breast cancer, although the meaning of beauty may
be subject to change.
In her review of feminist scholarship on beauty, Felski notes the common
pattern of exposing the constraining aspects of beauty, but asks, “Is there
a place in feminist thought for what we might call a positive aesthetic,
an affirmation, however conditional, of the value of beauty and aesthetic
pleasure?” (2006, pp 273–274). Beauty and aesthetics matter and can be
pleasurable but cannot only be born of individual experience. Rather, as
the women in this study indicate, new interpretations of beauty require
communities of experience and supportive daily interactions that create
pathways for new interpretations of beauty. When these lived experiences
counter normative social frameworks, new interpretations can and must
emerge through social interactions to make sense of them.
Women who live flat signal a potential expansion in the boundaries of
female embodiment and thus a possible interpretive shift for understanding
breast cancer experiences. But this shift is only as effective as it is visible.
Beauty still matters in breast cancer recovery, but its meaning is expanding.
Beauty can come through function, an embrace of bodily imperfection
(ie, scars), symmetry, and a sense of authentic embodied experience. This
expanded definition is supported not just in the minds of individual women
but also by their family members. In a cultural landscape where normative
and nonnormative genders visibly coexist, and movements to embrace bodies
and embodiments that resist hegemonic norms are on the ascendancy, breast
cancer culture must shift too. At the forefront of this shift are people like the
women in this study who refuse the normative discourse of breast cancer
recovery and recast beauty in more expansive terms.
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Notes
1
The Women’s Health and Cancer Rights Act, passed in 1998, codified women’s right to
and material support for breast reconstruction and prosthetics following mastectomy.
2
Living flat refers to the decision not to undergo breast reconstruction following mastectomy.
3
The relationship between structure and agency often appears to be about a powerful
set of ideologies and institutions (structure) that an individual can either conform or
not with associated social privileges and sanctions (Garfinkel, 1967; Goffman, 1977;
West and Zimmerman, 1987, 2009). These structural constraints severely limit the
possibility of emergence and novelty in relating to ideologies of gender. Processes
of creative resistance have more traction in the tradition of symbolic interactionists
who focus on actions, embodiments, and interpersonal interactions (Waskul and
Vannini, 2006; Noland, 2009). Creative resistance through embodied action and
interaction represents a path beyond the somewhat intractable debate between
structure and agency.
4
In the larger project, I focus on the experiences of 57 transgender men, cisgender men,
and cisgender women who challenge the standards of care for breast and gynecological
cancers and normative expectations for gendered bodies. I specifically looked at “female
specific cancers” because normative feminine embodiment is so deeply embedded within
breast cancer culture.
5
Shilling and Bunsell argue that through development of extreme musculature, female body
builders are “gender outlaws” who transgress and threaten the “gendered foundations of
social interaction itself ” (2009, p 142). Although body building is, perhaps, an extreme
attention to female muscle and strength, this notion is reflected in other studies of women
athletes (Krane et al, 2004). Additionally, women with muscles are racially signified, and
physical strength is used to distance Black women from the normative ideals of white
femininity that are central to the gender order (Beaubouf-Lafontante, 2003, 2009;
Strings, 2019).
6
The TRAM (transverse rectus abdominus muscle) flap procedure is an autologous breast
reconstruction using muscle from the lower abdomen.
7
It is also relevant that the perceived imperative for breast reconstruction after mastectomy is
a relatively recent development, gaining popularity after the adoption of silicone implants
in the 1970s (Jacobson, 1998).
References
Beaubouf-Lafontante, T. (2003) ‘Strong and large Black women? Exploring
relationships between deviant womanhood and weight’, Gender and Society,
17(1): 111–121.
Beaubouf-Lafontante, T. (2009) Behind the Mask of the Strong Black Woman:
Voice and the Embodiment of a Costly Performance, Philadelphia, PA: Temple
University Press.
Berlant, L. (2010) ‘Risky bigness: on obesity, eating, and the ambiguity
of “health”’, in J. Metzl, A. Kirkland and A.R. Kirkland (eds) Against
Health: How Health Became the New Morality, New York: New York
University Press, pp 26–39.
Bordo, S. (2009) ‘Twenty years in the twilight zone’, in C. Heyes and M.
Jones (eds) Cosmetic Surgery: A Feminist Primer, Aldershot: Ashgate, pp
21–34.
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154
7
From my field notes, Integral Yoga Institute, May–June 2012, lightly edited
for meaning:1
Aadesh began, however, by talking about the body and our (ideal)
relationship to it. “We are not the body,” he remarked, “even though
155
newgenrtpdf
Figure 7.1: Surya Namaskar (sun salutation)
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I start with this field note in order to highlight two points that are
important to the arguments I will be making in this chapter. First, this
field note provides a brief introduction to Integral Yoga’s “theology of the
body” (Griffith, 2004; Radermacher, 2013)—in other words, how this
community interprets the body and its relationship to the transcendent.
Most simply, Integral Yoga is rooted in a dualistic conception of the
body-mind (conceived as a single unit) and soul, where the two are said
to be wholly distinct. Integral Yoga practitioners (including the TTs)
are taught that while they have a body, they are “not the body.” Rather,
from the Integral Yoga perspective, the “True Self,” what students really
are, transcends the body. The goal of yoga practice, then, is to become
aware of, experience, and ultimately inhabit this “True Self.” Doing so, as
Aadesh argued, requires that practitioners “let go of their engagement with
the body.” In this way, practitioners’ interpretations of and relationships
to their bodies are linked to a broader process of personal spiritual
formation. More specifically, “attachment” to or identification with the
body is constructed as a barrier to spiritual progress, while “detachment”
from the body is constructed as both a goal of practice and a marker of
spiritual progress.
Second, this field note makes evident the centrality and salience of talk
and discourse as a means for cultivating bodily detachment. We see this
most explicitly in the assumed power of language—in this case, the teacher’s
verbal instructions and cues—to shape how students experience their bodies.
The correct language (ie, “the body”), Aadesh tells the TTs, can aid in the
cultivation of detachment, while the incorrect language (ie, your body) can
promote identification with the body, thus impeding spiritual progress.
Along these same lines, this field note illustrates how talk interpretively links
the practice of yoga to the Integral Yoga community’s broader symbolic
world. Using the sun salutation drill as an opportunity to do interpretive
work, Aadesh frames the Integral Yoga practice as a means to cultivate
bodily detachment, which in turn facilitates students’ spiritual formation
and transformation.
When I initially entered the field for this project, I imagined myself, like
Loïc Wacquant (2004) did in his study of becoming a boxer, as someone
participating in a kind of “apprenticeship ethnography” (Lizardo et al,
2016)—one involving the acquisition of (largely) practical and embodied
knowledge through repeated physical practice. I was surprised to find,
however, that the majority of my time in the teacher training program was
spent seated on my yoga mat, with a notebook in my lap, talking about
yoga with the other TTs and the program’s three main instructors: Aadesh,
Ron, and Ambika. This emphasis on didactic instruction and discussion
was not something I expected to encounter; it therefore became a
useful puzzle (Timmermans and Tavory, 2012), one that helped me to
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(Re)Interpreting the Body
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(Re)Interpreting the Body
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This field note highlights the role that vocabularies of motive play in
reinterpreting and reexperiencing the body. Aadesh first describes the
motivations of the “average” yoga practitioner and then places these
motivations in opposition to those of “Integral Yogis.” Integral Yogis, he
argues, are seeking spiritual formation. Implied in this opposition is that
Integral Yoga practitioners are not motivated by the more mundane bodily
goals that drive exercise-oriented yogis (Johnston, 2020). In this way, Aadesh
interpretively links the Integral yoga practice and the Integral Yogi identity
to a shared set of explicitly spiritual aspirations (see Johnston, 2016).
Aadesh is not wrong in his assessment of yoga practitioners’ motivations.
Many people, including the students I met at the IYI, initially take up the
practice of yoga with decidedly physical goals—for example, to lose weight,
to become stronger or more flexible, to counter the effects of aging, or
to manage anxiety and stress (Yoga Alliance, 2016). Teachers at the IYI,
however, offered alternative accounts of the effects of the practice and its
ultimate ends. Through immersion in the IYI community, newcomers are
repeatedly exposed to discourses—including narratives, personal accounts,
and verbal instruction—that interpretively decouple practical ability from
spiritual progress by emphasizing the spiritual nature and motivations for
practice while simultaneously downplaying the importance of physical
appearance and bodily skill. Becoming an Integral Yogi, then, involves a
reorientation of motivation and aspiration, one that (re)directs attention
away from the body and toward the “soul.”
Vocabularies of motive, I found, were transmitted and enacted in a number
of different spaces, including Integral Yoga Hatha classes. In a typical class,
teachers start by asking students to sit cross-legged with their eyes closed.
The instructor then leads students in several rounds of deep breathing
(deergha swasam). These opening minutes were used to “set intentions” for
the practice, and teachers played an active role in guiding students toward
establishing the “correct” attitude and set of motivations. While each teacher
had a unique style, nearly all took this time to remind students of why they
came and how they should approach the practice. The goals were related to
connecting to “what matters”: leaving behind the concerns of the mundane
world (of work, family, etc) and focusing on personal spiritual formation.
This vocabulary of motive was also evident in the biographical accounts of
Integral Yoga instructors. Unlike comparable studios in the area, instructors
at the IYI were not pictured performing difficult asanas in their online
bios. Rather, the studio preferred to use standard headshots, effectively
cutting off the instructors’ bodies from display. The biographical text that
accompanied these pictures explicitly highlighted the spiritual nature of
yoga and downplayed physical goals. One bio read: “Although originally
seeking yoga as a means to maintain and improve optimal physical health,
she [the instructor] has since realized that yoga is so much more than
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(Re)Interpreting the Body
physical postures.” And another read: “What initiated as a fitness practice has
evolved into a way of being.” By downplaying physical aspirations, teacher
bios modeled for students the ideal motivations for practice. Through their
narrative emphasis on personal evolution, they also described this new
perspective as the “logical endpoint on a continuum” of identity development
(Brekhus, 2003, p 126), interpretively linking it to ideas of “progress” and
“maturity” on a longer journey of spiritual formation.
I heard similar narratives in my interviews with the TTs. Julia, a teacher
trainee in her mid-30s, told me that she started practicing yoga at age 16
as “part of an exercise program” primarily aimed at improving her physical
health. It was only after taking her first formal yoga class eight years later
that she “really started to understand more about the other side of yoga; that
it wasn’t just postures and asanas and breathing and sweating.” Julia told me
that, over time, yoga “turned from a purely physical practice to, now, what
[she] think[s]has become a deeply spiritual practice.” Lynn, a 61-year-old TT
and practicing Catholic, had been doing yoga for more than 20 years when
we spoke at the start of the teacher training program. She told me that she
practiced in order to maintain flexibility, strength, and physical health as she
aged. By the end of her teacher training, however, Lynn had experienced an
important shift in her orientation toward practice. Though she was initially
embarrassed to admit it, Lynn confided that she used to leave classes at the
IYI after the asanas, skipping the second half of the class, which included
the deep relaxation, breathing exercises, and meditation. She recalled,
Some of that stuff just felt like, “Okay, we’re just filling time here.” But
now, I feel like it’s a good practice. I have a different appreciation for it
now, so I enjoy it. It just helps to, like, go inward a little bit more. …
I think I get that now. Where before, when we did yoga nidra, I felt a
little agitated: I’m like, “Okay, like, let’s go.” You know? Where, now,
this is like, “I’m relaxed, so we can do whatever.” That’s helped.
After the training, Lynn told me that she always stays for and enjoys the entire
class, viewing the practices she used to skip as equally, if not more, important.
These examples make clear that talk about motives and intentions can have
real consequences. Discourses and narrative accounts serve as “hermeneutic
hooks that interpretively link [social] actors’ present actions with elements
of their more temporally extended self-narratives, conjoining their practices
in the here and now with a motivational project of identity exploration and
development that extends far beyond the boundaries of the present moment”
(Winchester and Green, 2019, p 258) into the longer durée. Discourses that
link practice to other, less tangible, goals provide a way for practitioners and
teachers to encourage adherents to persist in the face of feelings of failure
(Johnston, 2017). Adherents often experience plateaus in their practical
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(Re)Interpreting the Body
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Interpreting the Body
and spitting into the water bowl at his side. Finally, on the fourth attempt,
he was able to get the sutra through and grab the threaded end with his
fingers. After doing so, he advised the TTs that it can be helpful to flick
the sutra forward with the tongue in order to grab it with your fingers—to
avoid stimulating the gag reflex.
The need for detachment from the body was evident in watching Ramdas
perform these practices but even more evident in doing them. Successfully
threading the floss through one’s nasal passage and “flossing” requires the
practitioners to overcome automatic bodily responses including the gag
reflex. Other shat kriyas required similar mastering and management of
bodily responses. In another practice, the practitioner drinks water until
they vomit in an effort to cleanse the stomach. More often than not, this
practice involved considerable discomfort. To complete the practice, the
individual must continue in the face of considerable resistance from the
body. The tension between the individual’s intentions and desires (to do
the practice) and the body’s response (of rejecting the attempt) provides a
tangible experience of the disconnect between the Self and body. In this way,
the discourse “you are not the body” is felt, experienced, and reinforced.
A similar interpretive logic was applied to the practice of maintaining “a
yogic diet.” Regarding diet, the Integral Yoga Basic Teacher’s Manual (1983,
p 255) specifies:
Our main object is to keep the mind and body in a tranquil condition.
Therefore, our food must be taken into serious consideration. … The
quality of the food, the quantity, the way of eating it, all should be
considered in order to get the maximum benefit.
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Interpreting the Body
example, “stretch the arms toward the ceiling, take hold of one wrist, and
pull up.” Alongside these, however, are three other forms of instruction. First,
there are instructions that direct students’ attention: “notice how the breath
takes shape as you position the body and work with it”; “focus awareness
on the small of the back region, between the small of the back and the
abdomen”; “note how the energy is flowing at this point … just take a
look.” Second, there are instructions that describe and specify the (ideal-
typical) content of experience at different points of the practice: “you’ll
find that as you do that, the body becomes light and energized [and] the
mind becomes still and centered—relaxed”; “you’ll notice the heart rate has
picked up”; “you feel a very powerful surge of energy.” And finally, there
are instructions that interpretively link practices to the longer-term effects
and outcomes of practice: “the eye movements tone up the muscles and
nerves of the eyes … they also help to develop the mind’s ability to focus
and concentrate very effectively”; “you’re squeezing the thyroid gland at the
base of the throat, giving the body an efficient, balance[d]metabolism.” All
four instructional forms—instructions directed toward bodily movement,
attention, experience, and longer-term effects—were considered essential
components of successful teaching.
While the content of verbal instruction was considered important in all
postures, there were a few places in which it was considered particularly
impactful, even crucial, that teachers use the “correct” language. Yoga nidra,
or the “deep relaxation” (also “yogic sleep”), was one such place. The
practice of yoga nidra begins with students in savasana (or corpse pose, see
Figure 7.2). Students are then guided by the instructor through a process of
“physical relaxation” involving the tensing and releasing of different parts
of the body, beginning one limb at a time, followed by the pelvis, chest,
neck, shoulders, and face. Students are then guided through a process of
“mental relaxation” in which they are instructed to bring their attention to
different parts of their body in sequence, from their toes to their heads, and
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(Re)Interpreting the Body
As you witness the body, you see it is totally at ease. [10-second pause]
The breath is flowing easefully as well—relaxed, not requiring any
effort at all. Just observe the breath. [1-minute pause] You can even
let go of the mind and just watch it—just witness the mind. The
mind too has become quite calm and still. It’s becoming more and
more placid. Sure, you may notice some movement, some thoughts,
but you don’t have to be involved in them. Just let them roll on and
let them go … just let the mind be. [30-second pause] Focus all of
your awareness now at this place from which you’re witnessing—the
knower, the seer—this is the seat of your True Self. Notice how
peaceful it is here. This is your true nature—this peace that’s unlimited
and ever-present. You’re never apart from this. This is your very
nature. … Allow yourself to experience without any reservation at
all, without any restrictions, the fullness of your being. Total peace,
total bliss. Total love.
Students are left in this position, in complete silence for five minutes, to
“observe the peace within” (Integral Yoga Basic Teacher’s Manual, 1983, p 85).
At the end of this period, teachers are instructed to “bring students back” to
their minds and bodies with an “om” or by ringing a small gong. Students
are then directed to bring attention back to the body—to breathe and then
slowly bring movement back to their bodies—before coming to a seated
position for the remainder of the class.
According to authoritative sources (eg, teachers, texts), the practice of yoga
nidra is intended to provide students with an embodied experience of their True,
Eternal Self and to help cultivate the disposition of “detachment” (Johnston,
2016). By asking students to let go of physical movement and effort and
then move into the act of “witnessing,” yoga nidra encourages practitioners
to dissociate from their bodies and minds and to view the mind-body as an
object from the perspective of an external observer. The training manual
(1983, p 86) offers a list of phrases teachers can use to help students cultivate
this sense of detachment during yoga nidra, including, among others:
• “Begin to witness the body and just see, like a vapor pouring out of the
body, all the tension being completely released and the body becoming
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Interpreting the Body
clear and open. Just free floating. … Let the head be centered as you
witness the body.”
• “Watch your mind as though it belonged to someone else. Regard any
thoughts as apart from who you really are.”
• “What is in your mind now?” And again, a few moments later, “And
now, what has changed, what thoughts are there? Separate yourself from
your thoughts.”
While it was suggested that the practice of yoga nidra itself enables this
experience and transmits practical (experiential, embodied) knowledge
of the “True Self,” it was also clear from the training program and the
manual that the teacher’s verbal instructions are an important component
of the practice. The teacher’s verbal instructions direct students’ attention
to specific parts of their bodies and particular embodied experiences. In
doing so, the verbal instructions facilitate a particular embodied experience
and provide a shared interpretive lens through which to interpret its
meaning. Through the practice of yoga nidra, the embodied experience of
relaxation is interpretively linked to the practitioner’s “true nature” and
“True Self.” This talk is itself a social practice, one that TTs are required to
master in order to graduate. In order to become a certified Integral Yoga
instructor, a TT also had to successfully lead a full Hatha Yoga class under
the observation of an Integral Yoga instructor who would evaluate the
aspiring teacher’s performance. Of the many requirements that determined
an aspiring teacher’s “success,” similar to the use of “the” rather than
“your” in referring to students’ bodies (see introductory fieldnote at the
beginning of this chapter), proper instruction during yoga nidra was given
particular importance. As models of shared practices, including discursive
practices, Integral Yoga teachers were required to use proper cues.
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(Re)Interpreting the Body
I felt, but I could tell from Aadesh’s body language and facial expression
that I was not quite getting it.8
It was only after spending more time in the field that I realized the
error I had made. The “it” that Aadesh was referring to was not a bodily
sensation (relaxation) or state of mind (calmness) per se but rather a spiritual
experience: it was “cosmic consciousness,” “Samadhi,” or “enlightenment,”
the taste of my “true nature” or “True Self ” that the practice was said
to provide.
Looking back now, I think I did feel “it” during that initial class—in the
sense that I had an embodied experience I would later come to suspect was
similar to what others at the IYI labeled experiences of the “True Self.”
However, I was not equipped at the time to use the correct language to
describe that experience—to articulate it in and through the interpretive
frameworks of the Integral Yoga community. I felt immersed in the
practice and fully present that day—an experience similar to what Mihaly
Csikszentmihalyi (2009) has called “flow.” I also felt a deep sense of peace
and calm during yoga nidra. I have had these kinds of experiences both before
and since my time at the IYI. It was only during my time there, however,
that I would find myself making sense of those embodied experiences
through the community’s interpretive frameworks—for example, framing
absorption in practice as a “moving meditation” or interpreting the relaxed
state experienced in yoga nidra as evidence of my “true nature.”
These frameworks provided a language with which I could articulate to
myself and others what these experiences are, what they mean, and how they
relate to the practices of yoga and meditation and to a broader trajectory of
spiritual and personal formation (Konecki, 2016; Griera, 2017). During that
first class, however, my inability to describe my embodied experience in ways
that made sense to Aadesh marked me as an outsider, or at least as a novice
practitioner with much to learn. Like Howard Becker’s analysis of becoming
a marijuana user, I found that for Integral Yoga practice and discourse to
become personally meaningful (and for the individual to become invested
in the practice), they must first learn to notice the effects of practice on the
body, interpret those effects as enjoyable and beneficial, and connect those
effects to the practice (Becker, 1953). The verbal instructions of teachers
model and facilitate these interpretive links between practice, experience,
and spiritual progress.
In this chapter, I have tried to show how those interpretive frameworks are
transmitted and to highlight the role they play in facilitating the cultivation
of bodily detachment (or disidentification). More broadly, this chapter
suggests that religious subjectivities and identities cannot be located clearly
in either the mind (explicit, discursive knowledge) or the body (implicit,
practical knowledge). Rather, lived experience and self-understanding are
emergent phenomena constituted through the complex interrelations of
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Interpreting the Body
the somatic and the symbolic. It is for this reason that a study of the lived,
embodied character of religious life must be just as attentive to the textual,
conceptual, and symbolic aspects of religious life as it is to the practical,
experiential, and performative dimensions. This chapter highlights the
importance, in particular, of looking at talk and discourse in situ if we
want to better understand how religious practices and discourses become
personally meaningful.
Notes
1
All meetings of the 200-hour teacher training program were audio recorded with
permission from attendees. Quotes included are direct quotes transcribed from the audio
recording with light editing. This example combines material from field notes and audio
recordings across several meetings held between May and June 2012.
2
All individual names are pseudonyms to protect confidentiality, except where participants
requested to have their real names used.
3
Some scholars in cultural sociology have interpreted narratives and accounts as
epiphenomenal—post-hoc justifications for action driven by unconscious habit and deeply
ingrained dispositions (Vaisey, 2009; Swidler, 2013). In this chapter, I align myself with
scholars who “take talk seriously” (Wuthnow, 2011)—those who interpret the symbolic as
an important means through which religious practices and discourses become personally
meaningful and persuasive (Winchester and Green, 2019; Winchester, 2022).
4
Integral Yoga Fact Sheet (https:/i ntegr alyo
ga.org/w
p-content/uploads/2016/02/IY-Fact-
Sheet.pdf).
5
Researchers have shown that the corporeal effects of practice may change over time as
practices become routine and habitual (Tavory and Winchester, 2012). As a result, this
approach is best suited to understanding the experience of novices—as both novices and
the researcher are new to the practice and social world.
6
This summary description is based on the author’s audio recordings and field notes from
July 2012.
7
For more information on the practice of Sutra Neti, see https://www.yogicwayoflife.
com/sutra-neti-nasal-cleaning-in-hatha-yoga/.
8
Author’s field notes, January 2012.
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177
8
Bodies carry us through the world and influence all our social interactions
(Story, 2010). Our experiences are mitigated by the politics surrounding our
corporeal form. For example, in the shared space of a train, surrounded by
strangers, some bodies are marked as outsiders because of skin color, spoken
language, clothing, or smell—characteristics to which passengers may
impute abject meanings, such as disgust (Miller, 1997), which then serve as
personal moral justifications for avoiding bodily interaction (Ahmed, 2000).
Black girls experience a form of this outsider status in classrooms. They are
cast in the margins of educational spaces based on multiple factors related
to their bodies: Black girls experience subjugation for their race, in their
Blackness; for their gender, in their girlness; and for their developmental
status, in their youthfulness. Many adults view and treat Black girls as older
and more mature than their actual age (Epstein et al, 2017). Relatedly, Black
girls receive more referrals, are punished more harshly, and are more likely
to be removed from school than their non-Black classmates for the same
infractions (Blake et al, 2011; Morris and Perry, 2017; Gibson et al, 2019).
What is more, they are disciplined more frequently for subjective actions,
such as disobedience, than objective violations, such as drug or alcohol
possession (Annamma et al, 2016). The misogynoir of these intersectional
subjugations—racism, sexism, and ageism—is linked to racial disparities
in how social actors interpret Black girls’ bodies.1 In school settings, this
misogynoir carries negative implications for Black girls’ sense of belonging,
exacerbating disparities in educational equality, widening opportunity
gaps, and reinforcing performance variances around race (Gregory et al,
2010). Previous research has found, for instance, that experiences with
school discipline and constant surveillance lead Black girls to feel devalued
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Black Girls’ Bodies and Belonging in the Classroom
in schools (Wun, 2016a). Beyond broader beliefs about the value of their
lives, these embodied intersectional subjugations impede healthy identity
development and academic performance among Black girls (Hines-Datiri
and Carter Andrews, 2017). They also center Black girls’ educational
lives around the burden of hypersurveillance, exclusionary notions of
femininity, and relationships characterized by antiblackness (Carter Andrews
et al, 2019).
Moving beyond conversations that tailor educational policy around
macrostructural issues, such as technology gaps or testing outcomes,
I propose that the consideration of Black girls’ embodied subjectivity in the
classroom, and the significance of their microlevel interactions, can help
illuminate some of the anti-Black messages shaping their corporeal realities
in schools. Specifically, examining and reflecting upon the corporeal politics
of how Black girls’ bodies are read and misread in the interactional context
of school allows us to consider how Black girls’ bodily negotiations may be
understood differently when interpreted from their own perspective. While
it may be the case that all face-to-face interactions between teachers and
students constitute a mutual exchange of embodied messages between an
initiator and a receiver (Goffman, 1963, p 16),2 in the context of classrooms,
it is also the case that the teacher’s interpretation will generally be invested
with greater authority. Given that Black girls’ bodies are often mis/read
through racist and sexist frames (López, 2002; Ridgeway, 2009), to resist
these misinterpretations, Black girls must strategically rewrite their bodily
form—their aesthetic and performance—to reclaim their bodily narratives
in an otherwise disempowering school environment.
In this chapter, I argue that Black girls’ bodies are mis/read, disciplined,
and othered in school settings by way of microlevel interactions that are
structured and interpreted through an inherited, transhistorical macrolevel
repertoire of misogynoir and anti-Black discursive frames. Particular to the
focus of this chapter, these frames comprise the unconscious “discursive,
[interpretive] rules” inherited from history, law, and science that teachers
carry into the classroom, and which constitute the “nexus[es] of [interpretive]
power” between teacher and student (Foucault, 1970; see Shiner, 1982 p
389). After elucidating how these discursive frames shape the way that people
“read” and interact with Black girls, and inform their understandings of what
being a Black girl means, I examine some of the discursive reversals that
Black girls employ to subvert these racist frames in school. More specifically,
I explore how the discursive yet corporeal codification of race, gender, age,
and the policing of Black girls’ bodies (namely, their talk, volume, and dress)
manifests in their school interactions.
To illustrate how Black bodies are mis/read by teachers and school policies
through an intersectional lens, I present my analytical argument vis-à-vis a
curated selection of ethnographic and other empirical examples drawn from
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180
Black Girls’ Bodies and Belonging in the Classroom
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collective image of the Black self that is dominant within the public
consciousness. Examples of reverse discourse include efforts to redefine
social citizenship by reclaiming and giving new meanings to formerly
cruel words. The words “nigga” and “bitch,” for instance, have risen in
popularity both as colloquial and familial words between Black people
and in modern popular culture and music. Black people’s use of “nigga”
establishes in-g roup membership around who can and cannot say it (only
Black people can say it [Goodwin, 2003]).6 And Black women uniquely
use the word “bitch” among themselves as a demeaning comparison to a
female dog or as a celebratory proclamation, such as being a “bad bitch”
or the “head bitch in charge” (Abrahams, 1976).
In the legal realm, the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) used various legislative strategies to perform
discursive reversals (Meier and Bracey, 1993; Watson, 1993). For example,
when D.W. Griffith’s film The Birth of a Nation was released in 1915, the
NAACP protested and fought to have it legally censored in response to the
problematic depiction of Black people (Weinberger, 2011). The Boston
branch of the NAACP described the film as prejudiced, immoral propaganda
that assassinated the character of Black people by portraying them as beasts
(NAACP, 1915). In popular culture, Black people worked to mitigate some
of the stereotypical elements in minstrel shows, such as Sambo yelps (Lemons,
1977). Each of these reclamations reflects a relational reversal in the exercise
of discursive power (Weedon, 1987).
Like reverse discourses centered in language use, embodied reverse
discourses give new semantic meaning to preexisting representations through
bodily modification, or body work. Body work, a term popularized by
sociologist Debra Gimlin (2007), “refers to the unpaid work individuals
do to modify their own bodies” (Mears, 2014, p 1332). The bodily
management and modification work done by Black girls is grounded in
the corporal performances and emotional labor they undertake to navigate
school settings, which, as sites of institutionalized knowledge managed by
disciplinary discourse, (re)produce the misogynoir stereotypes that have
shaped them and the interactions that take place within them (Gimlin, 2007;
Shange, 2019). If, as Arthur Frank posits, “‘the body’ is constituted in the
intersection of an equilateral triangle, the points of which are institutions,
discourses, and corporeality” (1991, p 49), then “[d]iscourses do not just
reveal corporeality but create it” (Shilling, 2012, p 83), and the body itself
learns what it is and means from the institutional, discursive landscapes within
which it is relationally embedded. It is within such a landscape that Black
girls find themselves navigating the institutionality of schools, the discourses
of controlling images about Black women and girls, and the politics of
their bodies. What is more, the fraught relational interdependency of this
landscape raises two important points of understanding frequently missing
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bodies are “produced by social force” (Shilling, 2012, p 85), their meanings
are “determined by shared vocabularies of body idiom that exceed individual
control” (Goffman, 1963, in Shilling, 2012, p 85).
In the sections that follow, I analyze discursive excerpts taken from
various qualitative studies of, as well as a few news articles on, Black girls’
embodied experiences in schools to explore how Black girls’ bodies—as
expressed and experienced through the relational, corporeal elements of
Black talk, backtalk, volume, and Black girl dress aesthetics—are mis/read
and policed in school spaces. Throughout my examination of the discursive
representations of Black girl students’ interactions found in these studies and
reports, I define what mis/readings of Black girls’ bodies are and explain
how, filtered through misogynoir discourse, they structure face-to-face
interactions between teacher and student and affect Black girls’ experiences of
belonging in schools. The empirical examples that follow are not exhaustive.
Representing a select assortment of teacher–student interactions drawn from
a set of cross-disciplinary studies, they are meant to be taken as an illustrative
starting point for further analysis and exploration.
Black vernacular has been our rightful voice throughout history, and
it has, in many ways, survived our souls when we have needed it most.
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Black talk captures the cadences, vernacular, and essence of the diverse ways
Black people communicate with one another, and it is irreducible to slang
(Smitherman, 1986). (Even the use of slang by a non-Black person will not
necessarily make them “sound” Black.) Related to Black talk, Black voice
describes what we hear when Black people speak; it is part of the essence of
sounding Black. According to McWhorter (2017), hearing Blackness involves
a racialized understanding of accented speech that is situated in an associative
sonic process made up of, independent of language use, “sonic flutters” that
are “part of the black American cultural tool kit. Five little frills, one could
call them, that immediately say black to an American listener even when
someone is speaking standard English” (McWhorter, 2017, p 70). What is
problematic about this association is not the identification of a “blaccent”
(McWhorter, 2017) but the comparative devaluation of a whole people
that accompanies it.
Racialized constructions of Black performances and history have attached
an anti-Black stigma to the speech and sound of Black girls using their voice
in classrooms. In April Baker-Bell’s (2020) ethnographic research on Black
high school students in Detroit, a Black girl named Janel described how
she felt about teachers policing her use of local Black vernacular: “When
I came to school and was speaking like that when I was younger, all my
teachers would tell me that’s not the right way to talk. I just started crying
… it took me down. I thought they were trying to scrutinize me!” (p 39).
Baker-Bell theorizes a linguistic double consciousness and explains that the
anti-Black linguistic racism in schools generated a conflict in Janel toward
Black speech. Janel experienced her teachers’ response as criticism and
extended policing of how she and other Black children spoke outside of
school. For Janel, her teachers’ scrutinization of the latter in the classroom
felt like a critique of who she was and what she knew. In classrooms, the
expected dialect is Standard American English; Black English and slang are
marked as inappropriate (Mordaunt, 2011; Wheeler, 2016). In this example,
I note how it is not only Black talk and voice that are discursively misread
but also what it means for Black people, particularly young Black people,
to use their voices.
While racialized sonic associations broadly shape perceptions of what
Black talk is and means, the senior–subordinate hierarchical relationship
of the teacher to the student, which is reinforced by differences in social
position and age, influences how disrespect and disruption are perceived
in student–teacher interactions. This is something that carries potentially
greater consequences for the policing of Black girls, for whom perceptions
of inappropriate talk are intensified as they are interpreted through the
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When Monica yelled “Whatever makes you sleep at night,” she was
using sassy and loud talk to defend herself. I would argue that she was
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also using backtalk to loudly call someone out so others could hear the
commotion, since speaking loudly about information usually thought of
as private can be a way to generate witnesses through testimony (Toliver,
2020). Speaking loudly out of turn can empower a student to control the
narrative of their supposed misbehavior. It also can bolster the student’s
reputation among peers and shield them against unfavorable perceptions
(Neal-Jackson, 2020). In refusing silence, Monica employed loud sassiness
not only as a method for reversing patriarchal and anti-Black discourses
that frame acceptable Black femininity in terms of deference, passivity,
and invisibility (hooks, 1986; Morris, 2007, pp 21–22) but also as a means
for inducing her teachers to regard her more closely and extend greater
consideration (and compassion) for the ways she must adapt and endure
(Abrahams, 1976).
In contrast to Monica, Kishana, a high school junior, suppresses her
loudness to play against and reverse racial stereotypes. In Nicole Joseph
et al’s (2016) study of Black female adolescents’ experiences and definitions
of racism in schools, Kishana reports that teachers in the International
Baccalaureate program at her school assume, due to their racially biased
lower expectations, that she will not succeed. She explains, “[Just] because
I’m Black doesn’t mean I can’t learn” (Joseph et al, 2016, p 18). To mitigate
their misperceptions, helping “the teachers come around and view her as a
smart, capable student,” Kishana says, “[I’m] not playing into the stereotype
of I’m going to be ghetto and loud and disrespectful” (p 18). Joseph et al
(2016) frames Kishana’s acknowledgement of stereotypes in schools as
racism in the form of judgment and disrespect rather than recognizing the
violent, insidious, othering discourse of the “loud and angry” Sapphire
at work. Further, I consider Kishana’s experience as indicative of the
legacy of racist discourses popularized in minstrel shows that associate
Black people with lower intelligence and smaller brains (Mahar, 1985).
Keeping these embodied background discourses in mind, we can see that
Kishana suppresses her loudness to avoid being framed as a loud, angry, and
unintelligent Black girl.
These examples of teacher–student interactions depict Black girls’ critical
reflections on the discriminatory exchanges they experience at school.
Together these experiences and reflections comprise powerful catalysts for
responding loudly to unfairness and for transforming misconceptions of
Black girls’ embodiment and educational potential. To further illuminate
how alternation between silence and loudness can forge powerful reverse
discourses that subvert negative ideas about Black bodies, in the following
sections I draw on examples of Black girls’ use of silence and laughter to
explore how these forms of resistance and survival unfold in the midst
of anti-Black background discourses that frame teachers’ perceptions of
Black talk.
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all, compel the teacher to contradict his prior condemnation. In this way,
quietness can become a reclamation of unapologetic Blackness (Allen and
Miles, 2020): it challenges the typified, expressively outward and public
performance of the Black subject by centering the equally expressive inward
Black self (Quashie, 2012).
As a performative strategy, silence is not without its drawbacks. The silence
of high-achieving Black girls is sometimes mirrored by the silence of their
teachers and school administrators, who neglect to acknowledge the student’s
achievements (Fordham, 1993). Quietness can also reinforce racialized
gendered stereotypes that associate silence with “ladylike” passivity labeled
“good” and loudness with “unladylike” assertiveness labeled “bad” (Fordham,
1993; Lei, 2003; Morris, 2007). Nevertheless, Black girls’ silence does not
guarantee them protection from the potential negative perceptions of their
peers and teachers, especially when Black girlhood is read as inherently
resistive (Fordham, 1993) and resistance is primarily associated with loudness.
Though Black girls recognize the false dichotomy that teachers draw between
silence and loudness during their interactions, given the unlikelihood that
either response will change the circumstances of their oppression, they do
what is necessary to survive as wholly as possible.
The supposed counternarrative to loud Black girls would be quiet girls
who are believed to perform well in school, and who are, therefore, exempt
from discipline or antagonism because quietness is interpreted as antithetical
to Blackness. Whether loud or quiet, all Black girls suffer the misreading of
their bodies in schools. A Black girl who has chosen quiet, or who is quiet,
may be rendered invisible because quietness does not fit the “loud Black
girl” or Sapphire frame. And yet this damaging invisibility is not always easily
perceived by others, since Blackness itself—and thus its hypervisibility and
misreading as inherently resistive—is often framed as bold and loud. Hence,
to make this plight visible, a student may resort to backtalk, as Monica did
when she blurted out to her teacher “Whatever makes you sleep at night”
(Wun, 2016a, p 186), while still choosing quiet by not revealing the details
of her home life. What is important to keep in mind here is that both quiet
and loud strategies of resistance and survival emerge from the tension born
out of Black girl students’ situated need to, on the one hand, defend and
visibilize themselves and their dignity and, on the other hand, preserve the
peace, particularly their inner peace and integrity. Black girls are, therefore,
positioned between and against loud and quiet performances, where neither is
acceptable because both will be misread, policed, and framed as “a problem.”
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Interpreting the Body
not in keeping with the seriousness that classroom learning requires. Yet
studies show that student laughter can carry positive educative and social
benefits. Tied to physical and emotional relief, and therefore inseparable
from pleasure, laughter in classrooms can reduce anxiety, boost psychological
well-being, improve student engagement and motivation, and foster close,
trusting connections between teachers and students (Lujan and DiCarlo,
2016; Savage et al, 2017). Given this, it is especially important for teachers to
think about the implications of how they police Black emotions, particularly
Black joy. As a critical praxis against respectability politics, Black girls may
employ laughter to subvert the power dynamics of classroom interactions
(Waller, 1932), neutralize the teacher’s suppressive control, and reclaim
learning spaces as sites of pleasure and joy (Garner et al, 2019). Permitting
boisterous sonic performances in classes disrupts rigid and anti-Black body
policing in schools.
The preceding examples of Black girls’ use of backtalk, sass, loudness,
quietness, and laughter demonstrate how the macrolevel discourses that shape
perceptions of Black talk can produce a combination of racialized age-and
gender-based mis/readings that lead to the overpolicing of Black girls in
classrooms via their embodiment. The “controlling images” (Collins, 2009),
antiblackness, misogynoir, and hegemonic notions of gender and femininity
that guide the discursive oppression that Black girls face in classrooms denote
the ways they are construed as outsiders on a sonic level. Yet the discourses
that frame and filter mis/readings of Black girls’ vocal performances are also
imposed upon their bodies more tangibly, notably through the policing of
their dress.
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Interpreting the Body
Conclusion
In their school-based interactions, Black girls navigate discursive stereotypes
related to their gender, race, and age. Playing into these narratives and
sometimes resisting them, Black girls aim to write their own narratives
through their bodies. They recognize the politics surrounding their bodies
in schools and actively negotiate the politics of their interactions. They shift
their behaviors in response to the interpersonal dynamics at play. Black girls
work to assert their presence in classrooms and manipulate their behavior and
bodies to challenge rules, change the planned itinerary, and reclaim some
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Notes
1
Misogynoir is the perpetuation of violent compounded sexism and racism that Black
women and girls navigate (Bailey, 2010; Bailey and Trudy, 2018).
2
This is true regardless of whether they speak to one another. All linguistic exchanges
feature embodied messages, but not all embodied messages include or necessitate spoken
language (Goffman, 1963).
3
Controlling images are stereotypes and biased depictions used by those in positions of
power to oppress and degrade a group of people and rationalize their marginalization
(Collins, 2009).
4
The Mammy is usually depicted as a desexualized, domestic housemaid or caretaker who
has left her family to serve a white family. The Jezebel is a hypersexual, promiscuous, and
sexually insatiable woman (Simms, 2001; Collins, 2009). The Sapphire is an aggressive,
intimidating, matriarchal figure who is usually associated with the angry Black woman
stereotype (Stephens and Phillips, 2003).
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Interpreting the Body
5
A reverse discourse uses the signifiers of an earlier, usually dominant, discourse but employs
these signifiers in a way that gives them an alternate interpretation (Weaver, 2010).
6
It is important to note that the word “[n]igga is not simply nigger pronounced ‘blackly’”
(McWhorter, 2017, p 164).
7
In Black communities, the mixing of affectionate play, backtalk, cursing, and even fake-
hitting (or threatening to hit) are necessary defensive survival tools and performance
of street smarts that help Black folks to navigate challenges of inequality and systemic
silencing (Abrahams, 1976; Anderson, 1999; Hatt, 2007).
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9
Embodied Vulnerability
and Sensemaking
with Solidarity Activists
Chandra Russo
I sit down to write about the embodiment of solidarity activism during the
early days of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic. I work from home because
the university campus where I work has recently closed, the vast majority
of our students sent home for the semester. My toddler squeals in the
background; daycares and schools have been shuttered. State leaders beg for
more medical infrastructure, and public health experts attempt to explain
the rationale for what some are terming “the new normal.” For many of
us living comfortable lives in the Global North, the human body, with all
of its vitality and vulnerability, has not in our lifetimes seemed so central
to matters political, social, ethical, and epistemological. Nor, perhaps, has
our interdependence as a global community ever been so stark.
For nearly a decade, I have been studying, and at points collaborating
with, a cohort of activists whose work foregrounds this fundamental
interdependence as well as the shared, if unequally allotted, vulnerability
of the human body. These predominately white, middle-class activists
from the Christian Left protest the racialized violence of US security
policies against Latinx migrants, Muslim detainees, and workers in the
Global South. These groups include: (1) School of the Americas Watch,
which endeavors to close the military training facility at Fort Benning,
Georgia; (2) the Migrant Trail Walk, part of the US/Mexico border justice
movement; and (3) Witness Against Torture, a grassroots effort to close the
Guantánamo Prison. Through “observant participation” (Vargas, 2006),
interviews, and archival analysis, I explore how these groups engage in
embodied practices of solidarity with the state’s targets while contesting
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Interpreting the Body
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Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
205
Interpreting the Body
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Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
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Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
participants attach to their weeklong journey and the impacts of this kind
of activism.
There is a vast literature on the challenges of gaining access to and trust
from research participants, the ethics of navigating power differentials
between the researcher and researched, and the complex obligations of those
doing research with activist groups with whom they are aligned (Geertz,
1974; Naples, 2003; Hale, 2008). Migrant Trail participants tend to be
highly educated, with many participants in any given year being students in
college and graduate programs, K–12 educators, and college professors. Some
border activists are nevertheless skeptical of researchers, journalists, and even
politicians who they have seen “parachute” into border communities, pursue
their respective projects, and leave without reciprocity or accountability to
those from whom they have extracted time and resources. I was well aware
of this dynamic when I requested permission from organizers to administer
surveys and conduct interviews during the 2011 Migrant Trail Walk, which
would be my fourth time doing the walk.
I had likely earned organizers’ trust in a number of ways. We had common
experiences and memories from prior walks, increasingly overlapping social
networks, and I had taken on greater leadership over the years, allowing me
to demonstrate competence and care. I would suggest that shared experiences
of embodied vulnerability on the walk enhanced a sense of mutual trust.
Indeed, one of my central research findings would ultimately point to the
role of shared physicality on the Migrant Trail as helping participants to forge
a sense of solidarity with each other (Russo, 2014). Having been sweaty
and dirty, shared blisters and discomfort in the heat, slept and attended to
bodily functions in close proximity with each other swiftly builds a sense of
intimacy and close connection. Some participants even pointed to a kind
of dissolution of the self as being part and parcel of sharing in the affective
experiences of embodied vulnerability in close community over time. As
Susan, a longtime Migrant Trail participant observed,
The desert wears you down and this experience kind of breaks away
at those barriers that we hold up in our regular lives. We’re able to
feel things just being out here in the context of this community; we’re
having a shared experience. And so we kind of have a little bit of an
idea of what we’re all experiencing. That creates a space for being
open and for those emotional things to happen.
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Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
Such limitations could in some ways be mitigated by the fact that I was
able to return to the walk over subsequent years, engaging more fully in
observant participation without also conducting interviews and surveys
in the desert. The point remains, however, that engaging in physically
demanding activities as an observant participant can interrupt the kinds of
habituated embodiment, themselves structured by social power, that might
allow some researchers to ignore the methodological ramifications of their
particular embodiment.
The affective experience of unsettled embodiment forced me to
acknowledge my body’s role in the research enterprise, even when doing
so was not my preference. Yet such affective experiences also motivated me
to explore how participants discern meaning from physically demanding
protest. I now pivot from methodological considerations to an analysis
of just this, exploring how Migrant Trail participants make sense of
their affective experiences of embodied vulnerability as instantiations
of solidarity.
Interpreting labors
I began my first Migrant Trail Walk with a head cold. I had been so physically
miserable the week prior that I considered foregoing the walk altogether.
I was undeniably anxious about spending a week with a group of strangers
in an activity intended to be uncomfortable. When the 50 of us walkers
arrived at our first campsite on the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Reserve,
I struggled alone to erect the tent my friend had lent me, warning that
I needed such a thing to guard against scorpions and venomous snakes. It was
near sunset and still 90 degrees. Having been up since dawn packing trailers,
caravanning to the border, walking through the heat of the day, missing a
turn, and taking in everything new and tragic about migrant deaths, I was
exhausted, hungry, and disoriented. As it turned out, I also was completely
unable to pitch a tent. I struggled with my one-person shelter for several
minutes, too embarrassed to admit I did not know how it worked or to
seek help. I sat in the shambles of nylon, metal posts, and stakes, facing away
from the group, sobbing silently. I hoped, correctly as it turned out, that
between my sunglasses and huge hat brim, and the fact that everyone else
was too busy setting up their own tents, that no one would notice the new
girl weeping at the edge of camp.
By the end of that week, I would feel intense camaraderie with other
walk participants, and a deep sense of purpose, reflecting on the absurdity
that during my first evening a misbehaving tent had brought me to tears.
How did I move from a sense of isolation, focused on my petty discomforts
in the desert, to a profound sense of connection with my fellow travelers
and a deepened commitment to a cause?
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I think I kind of got it when my feet hurt so badly and knowing that
it’s like this but just a gazillion times worse is how migrants feel at night
when it’s dark and hiding out, walking on bare flesh. I’m walking and
hurting and I have the words in my head, like Teresa said, “For every
step you hurt, think of your brothers and sisters.” (Adelheid, first-time
Migrant Trail Walk participant)
Adelheid gives a fairly explicit account of how she gets from the sense
experiences of embodied vulnerability—“feet hurt so badly,” “I’m walking
and hurting”—to a feeling of solidarity with crossing migrants. Key to
Adelheid’s interpretive pathway are the words of one of the walk’s longtime
participants, Teresa. During an Indigenous blessing ceremony at the Migrant
Trail’s beginning, Teresa unravels a string of hundreds of handmade prayer
ties. Each tie symbolizes a life lost in the Arizona desert that year. As Teresa
wraps the string of prayer ties around its stick so that we can carry it through
the desert, she reminds us to think of our migrant “brothers and sisters” for
every step that we hurt.
Across the groups that I study, there is a common acknowledgment that
insofar as we are all vulnerable we have a common obligation to protect and
care for others across the stratification of such vulnerability. Teresa’s language
of “brothers and sisters,” a familial lexicon that is used across these groups,
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Interpreting the Body
to Jews. Thus, at one level, Molly was reticent to ascribe a religious intent
to her desert protest in a movement context that downplays religiosity
in an effort to be inclusive. At another level, Molly also seems to give
voice to the uneasy work of interpreting affect; she struggles over some
years to capture the complex affective experiences of the desert journey
with a single term. This seems to mirror Gould’s (2009) insight that in
the effort to capture that which eludes language, to bring affect into
the realm of social meaning, the affect itself is necessarily bounded and
turned into something else. On a third level, it is noteworthy that Molly
seems to understand her attribution of meaning to the walk as deeply
personal, intimate, and interior. This experience is, of course, true in
every sense, in that it is what she feels. At the same time, her profound
sense of this “interior spiritual thing that happens for me” is in fact a
common, patterned one for Migrant Trail participants, especially those
who have some familiarity with religious practices. In this way we see
how the energetic force of affect, and the spiritual meaning attributed
to it, feels interior and unique even though much of this experience is
shared by others in the same movement context.
The walking itself has taken a profound physical and emotional toll on
me. Seeing the climate, the border patrol driving by and just rounding
up people, loading them up on buses. Then you just see stuff on the
road—a bottle, footprints. You just take a step back and think, “They’re
probably making this passage right now, in our midst.” And they don’t
have the luxuries that we have. They probably have like a four-liter
jug of water or whatever, but it’s desperate compared to our situation.
(Rory, first-time Migrant Trail Walk participant)
Hailing from the much cooler territory of Manitoba, Canada, Rory was
one of the walk participants who struggled the most with the desert heat.
He also misplaced his eyeglasses on the first night of the walk. During a
dinner conversation, Rory admitted that he had, at first, felt sorry for himself
when confronted with the walk’s discomforts. He noted, however, that in
being surrounded by others that shared the intention of enacting solidarity
with migrants, he was able to reconsider his own struggle and instead pay
attention to those forced into the desert. Sitting, head bowed, recovered
glasses smudged with the ubiquitous Sonoran dust, he reflected, “I mean,
it’s not about me, right?”
Perhaps the most significant interpretive frame for the groups in my study
is how participants identify their social privilege. These activists emphasize
that their efforts are a mere token or gesture in the face of the incomparable
violence faced by the tortured, disappeared, and sequestered. While there is
important social diversity in each group, nearly all acknowledge that their
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Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
choice to bear witness through physically demanding and high-r isk tactics is
predicated on how their own bodies are protected by race, class, and often
able-bodied privilege. These activists understand bodily discomfort and risk
as a way to divest from their embodied privileges. By forcing themselves to
pay attention to their own and others’ embodied vulnerability, they resist the
seductions of the dominant order that would have us ignore or be apathetic
in the face of the US security state’s unequal and racialized exercise of
violence (Russo, 2018).2
Yet, akin to my experience with erecting my tent, Rory’s account reveals
how the affect that accompanies embodied vulnerability can engender a sense
of self-focus and even self-pity. Having one’s physical comforts withdrawn can
induce the human organism to pay full and immediate attention to the self.
Part of the power of physically demanding, high-r isk solidarity activism is that
it is part of a communal practice to forge counterhegemonic commitments
and interpretations that might otherwise feel counterintuitive. By identifying
moments of interpretive labor whereby participants endeavor to make sense
of their sense experiences, connecting the affective experiences of embodied
vulnerability to the work of solidarity, we glimpse how movements serve
as sensemaking projects.
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Most ethnographers have moments such as these, though maybe not always
so dramatic: experiences that reveal something about the social world into
which the researcher has ventured but are not the most exemplary of the
phenomena they wish to explore and explain. My encounter with the
disproportionate power of the US security state—with the complex identities
and tactics of its officers and the dynamics of my own raced and gendered
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217
Interpreting the Body
218
Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking
Conclusion
This chapter argues for the methodological as well as analytic importance
of examining felt, embodied experience in social movement research.
Reflecting on ethnographic work with solidarity activists contesting the
US security state, I explore how embodied vulnerability shapes the research
enterprise and how activists work collectively and continuously to make
sense of their embodied vulnerability as instantiations of solidarity. As
movement scholars move away from predominately structural and historical
explanations for protest to emphasize instead the complexities of human
agency (Jasper, 2018; Van Ness and Summers-Effler, 2018), there is an
increasing need to consider the experiential, and specifically embodied, basis
of meaning-making and motivation. By suggesting that social movements
might fruitfully be considered as sensemaking projects, this chapter proposes
a broadly phenomenological approach for capturing the embodied and
affective dynamics as well as the interpretive maneuvers shaping activists
and their movements.
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Acknowledgments
The author is deeply grateful to the book’s editors, Anne Marie Champagne
and Asia Friedman, who provided generous and incisive feedback on earlier
drafts of this manuscript.
Notes
1
In line with the definition offered by Deborah Gould (2009), I use the term “affect” to
mean the range of “nonconscious and unnamed, but nevertheless registered, experiences
of bodily energy and intensity that arise in response to stimuli impinging on the body”
(p 19).
2
I want to be careful not to exaggerate the role of embodied privilege in the face of state
violence during high-r isk activism, or even protest events, that do not intend to be high
risk at all. During the writing of this chapter, one of the participants in my study was
seriously injured by the Buffalo, NY, police force during a racial justice protest, a story
that earned national and ultimately global attention (Vigdor et al, 2020).
3
Alcoff (2005) observes how bodies that are not so easily categorized have long been
deeply unsettling to social institutions and liable to draw strong cultural responses of fear
and disgust. In US society there are elaborate rules and sometimes medical procedures
to reconcile such ambiguity. Consider centuries of legal battles around hypodescent and
racial mixing (Harris, 1993) or the assumed necessity of surgery for infants with ambiguous
genitalia (see, for example, Fausto-Sterling, 2000).
References
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Civic Engagement, New York: Cambridge University Press.
Ahmed, S. (2007) ‘A phenomenology of whiteness’, Feminist Theory, 8(2):
149–168.
Alcoff, L.M. (2005) Visible Identities: Race, Gender, and the Self, New York:
Oxford University Press.
Bendelow, G.A. and Williams, S.J. (1995) ‘Transcending the dualisms: towards
a sociology of pain’, Sociology of Health and Illness, 17(2): 139–165.
Butler, J. (2004) Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence,
New York: Verso.
Chadwick, R. (2017) ‘Embodied methodologies: challenges, reflections and
strategies’, Qualitative Research, 17(1): 54–74.
Crossley, N. (1995) ‘Merleau-Ponty, the elusive body and carnal sociology’,
Body and Society, 1(1): 43–63.
Durkheim, E. (1912) The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, translated by
K. E. Fields, New York: Free Press, 1995.
Emerson, R., Fretz, R. and Shaw, L. (1995) Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes,
Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Eyerman, R. and Jamison, A. (1991) Social Movements: A Cognitive Approach,
University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.
Fausto-Sterling, A. (2000) Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction
of Sexuality, New York: Basic Books.
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221
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Sheridan, T.E. and McGuire, R.H. (eds) (2019) The Border and Its Bodies: The
Embodiment of Risk along the U.S.–México Line, Tucson: University of
Arizona Press.
Sutton, B. (2010) Bodies in Crisis: Culture, Violence, and Women’s Resistance
in Neoliberal Argentina, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Turner, B.S. (2006) Vulnerability and Human Rights, State College: Pennsylvania
State University Press.
Turner, P.K. and Norwood, K.M. (2013) ‘Body of research: impetus,
instrument, and impediment’, Qualitative Inquiry, 19(9): 696–711.
Van Ness, J. and Summers-Effler, E. (2018) ‘Emotions in social movements’,
in D.A. Snow, S.A. Soule, H. Kriesi and H.J. McCammon (eds) The Wiley
Blackwell Companion to Social Movements, Chichester: John Wiley and Sons,
Ltd, pp 411–428.
Vargas, J.H.C. (2006) Catching Hell in the City of Angels: Life and Meanings
of Blackness in South Central Los Angeles, Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press.
Vigdor, N., Victor, D. and Hauser, C. (2020) ‘Buffalo police officers
suspended after shoving 75-year-old protester’, The New York Times, June 5.
222
10
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224
Our Bodies, Our Disciplines, Our Selves
Maybe these authors would argue that their discipline never had anything
to do with their personal embodiment, but they would have to agree that
they used their disciplines to understand their embodied quandaries.
But it can be the other way too. From a particular embodied stance
(illness, diagnosis, catharsis), the scholar finds their discipline: locating it as
a way of understanding, celebrating, or theorizing their physical existence
in the world.
That is where I started. My scholarly direction owes much to my own
experience of my body. How does my own discipline start from an embodied
experience? Discretely, you might be thinking about turning the page,
anticipating an episode of oversharing in which I reveal some intimate detail
of my life or some past illness. You may already be worrying about my use
of the first person, a sign of anti-scholarship: too personal, too subjective.
Maybe you prefer the passive voice, where the subject is absent. You
would have liked the editorial guidelines on good scientific writing in Nature
Immunology in 2005 (hopefully, now the “old days”), which specified that the
passive voice “emphasizes the important ‘actor’ of the manuscript, namely,
biology” (“Good data need good writing,” 2005). Donna Haraway (1991)
refers to this as “disembodied scientific objectivity” (p 185), a way of writing
that infers but in no way ensures the neutral positioning of the observer.
But this chapter is “light touch” embodiment. You will not be subjected
to stories of pathology but to stories of how I came to my understanding
about the location of power and the social generation of values. And, to be
clear, even while I landed in diagnosis, my embodied story of the sociology
of diagnosis does not start in disease, it starts in gender.
In 1995, I learned what “gender” meant, as distinct from biological “sex.”
I had used the word previously. I was 34 years old, and while I had not spent
my life under a rock, I did not really know what it was until I went back
to university, primed to do a degree in physical education. I had decided
to return to study after 15 years of nursing. While I was a nurse, I was also
an elite runner, and I was a member of the temple of running. At the time,
I thought that everyone could benefit from a bit of a jog.
One might imagine my choice of nursing as one connected to a pious
altruism, when it was really a misplaced belief that nursing was a health-
oriented profession somehow related to running. I had never been in a
hospital, or been ill in my life, so there was little experiential (and I now
know, theoretical) evidence to support this connection. Neither nursing
nor running is, in fact, health oriented, and yet both would uncritically
claim to be so. Running: Sport. Nursing: Sickness. Either one of these
analogies would deserve an entire chapter. I will leave that as is, other than
to comment on the number of surgeries I have had to keep me running
and the number of my running friends who died in middle age. Running
was not the cardiovascular panacea we had believed it to be.
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Our Bodies, Our Disciplines, Our Selves
In learning about gender, I learned about critical reflection: the same critical
reflection that I try to instill in my students when they walk in the door at
university. Things are not as they seem. Scratch the surface. What is going
on? What forces are at play? Where is power located?
Motivated by Vertinsky’s interest in the historical construction of female
frailty, which I could understand, I decided to expand on Vertinsky’s work
by exploring menstrual product advertising in historical copies of New
Zealand women’s magazines. This was my honors research project. I spent the
summer in library stacks breathing in the dust of the decades and collecting
gems like “Poise at trying times is easily attained through using Santex or
Sannette” and “Modess, because …”
So, I had discovered the social construction of gender, but I had not yet
understood what theoretical framing was or how to find a theoretical frame.
Sure, gender was one, but it was not specific enough. And—as I support
students to find their own theoretical frames today—I realize that my
problem was that I had not yet read enough. I can remember asking my
husband, a film and media studies lecturer, “So how do you find one [a
theoretical frame]?”—“It’s not like you can just pull one off of the shelf!”
I interjected, indignant. As students, our shelves are too bare, and it is only
as they progressively become populated (volumated?) that we have theories
upon which to draw.
I found my theory when I stumbled across Iris Marion Young’s (1980)
“Throwing Like a Girl,” in which she described a kind of “feminine
movement” in line with the constructed frailty that Vertinsky wrote
about. Feminine movement, as she described it, included three typical
stances: restricting the amount of space available for engagement in the
world; fragmenting the body, rather than experiencing it as a transcendent
whole; and treating the body like a fragile object. What she brought en sus
was a philosophical reflection regarding the effects this constructed frailty
has on the experience of the subject and her engagement with the world.
The theoretical framework I put together from Young and Vertinsky found
additional support in Drew Leder’s (1990) arguments on the phenomenon
of disappearance: the body of the transcendent subject is not perceived, for
it disappears in favor of subjective intentions. Presto!
What this meant to me was that everything that brought the female body
forward in the consciousness of the subject also somehow constrained it.
How can a young girl engage freely and unreservedly in physical activity if
she is always at the same time protecting herself like a fragile object? The
“presencing” of the body is a barrier to its fulfilment. These advertisements—
advocating a need for extraneous support for normal biological function,
referring to menstruation as dangerous or trying, and presenting the woman
as always poised and pretty—were all presencing discourses.
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Our Bodies, Our Disciplines, Our Selves
to work that day (it was all downhill from the house, as well as quicker and
smarter than using the car). As I pulled off my top, Lesley looked at my
skinny, muscled body and commented:
“You’re so good!”
“Hunh?” I must have mumbled.
“Look!” she replied, as she pinched her own tummy, showing a modest
amount of subcutaneous adipose tissue. “I’m BAD!”
That was it. Riding on the back of Young’s (1980) feminine movement, and
Leder’s (1990) disappearing body, I had an aha moment about the subject
of my PhD thesis. I would explore feminine self-scrutiny, that practice of
carefully examining the body, of pinching, prodding, and stretching to
discover and then presumably redress a continual parade of flaws: pluck your
eyebrows, rouge your lips, do your steps, sit up straight!
But here I am also asking: How do we as women (in particular) come to
see “truths” about our inner selves inscribed upon our bodies? Of course,
the critical scholar should start by querying whether or not there even is
an inner and an outer. But in this case, the idea that our respective moral
qualities should inscribe themselves upon our abdomens was an irresistible
matter to explore. My PhD was to be entitled “Visions of Vice: Appearance
and Policy in Feminine Self-Scrutiny.”
I undertook this study using a mishmash of cultural history, sociology,
philosophy, and any other available technique I could get my hands on that
could help me demonstrate how we saw correspondence between “inside”
and “outside.” I learned, for example, about the physiognomists who thought
they could determine things like character, criminality, mental illness, and
racial purity on the basis of the size of different body parts. Lavater (1855)
generated a massive catalog in which he assigned personality traits to physical
signs. “Can any benevolent, wise, or virtuous man, look, or walk, thus?”
he wrote in his Essays on Physiognomy (plate IX), to caption an etching of a
man of medium build, hands in pockets, tricorne under his arm, receding
hairline and chin.
The phrenologists were drawn to the skull as their means for accessing
inner truth. A prominent occipital bone might be, for example, a sign of
“philoprogenitiveness (the capacity to love and care for children and small
animals)” (Fowler and Fowler, 1857, p 54), while self-esteem would be
evidenced by a prominent, rather than sloping, crown (p 81).
From the physiognomists to the phrenologists, as well as from the
Renaissance portrait artists arranging marriages to the Victorians trying
to irradicate the scourge of onanism (because masturbation “shows” in
the complexion and in the shadows under the self-abuser’s eyes), I sought
to identify the (gendered) “duty to beauty” as a moral endeavor. Even
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I did try to conform a little bit to what I thought a PhD must be about,
and I wrote a concluding chapter that was a kind of policy review. I tried
to pick out the enduring patterns from my big, trans-epochal, trans-
media, trans-disciplinary project on the aesthetics of vice to see how they
imprinted contemporary health policies concerned with weight. Probably
the most important thing to come out of that in relation to the sociology
of diagnosis (not yet a field, by the way) was how “overweight” was
discursively constructed as a “thing” with its own symptoms, warning signs,
and consequences, rather than simply, as my historical work had shown, a
measure of deviation from a normative weight value.
Why it had become a diagnosis, I argued, had to do with the convergence
of two important phenomena. As I wrote in my 2006 article in Social Science
and Medicine, “the first is the belief in the neutrality of quantification, and
the objectivity that measurement brings to qualitative description. The
second is the importance attributed to normative appearance in health”
(Jutel, 2006a, p 2268).
I came to realize that “thingness,” which was at the root of the emergence
of overweight as a category of disease, underpinned all diagnoses. I
wondered: How do we come to see something as worthy of thingness and
of assigning it a concordant label? I was drawn to this question of thingness
by virtue of my curiosity and my job history. My first postdoc job was as a
research fellow on a project relating to stillbirth in the pediatrics department.
As I did the literature review for the primary investigator, I was struck by
the fact that stillbirth was an almost meaningless term, given the variety of
definitions across nations, and even states (Jutel, 2006b). Another historical
diagnosis I stumbled across, drapetomania, categorizes a disease that causes
slaves to run away. Both of these diagnoses (stillbirth and drapetomania)
are examples of the political and cultural context in which diagnoses are
conceptualized. The former underscores the fraught nature of pregnancy
amid the pro-life/pro-choice movements, and the latter illustrates how
diagnosis enacts and reinforces social power.
Thingness was also the basis for my reflection on Female Hypoactive
Sexual Desire Disorder whose ontological status owed much to the
pharmaceutical industry (Jutel, 2010). It was the perfect heuristic for
revealing this encroachment of industry marketing on disease creation. I was
looking for a way of revealing how the pharmaceutical industry messes with
popular definitions of health and disease. I do not actually remember how
I stumbled across this as an example, but it was powerful. In this case, an
industry craving a pink Viagra and the potential windfall it could provide
for shareholders was aggressively casting low libido as illness and pills as a
solution (Jutel and Mintzes, 2017).
At this point, reader, if you believe my point of departure, in which
I maintained that I would not embarrass you with intimate detail, you may
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surmise (or hope) that I am drifting away from my own embodied departure
as I recount the range of conditions, experienced by other embodied beings,
that were to become the focus of my scholarship. You would not be mistaken.
I did not need to experience stillbirth or low libido to find the direction in
which my focus on diagnoses would lead me. Indeed, even overweight was
not a diagnosis I had ever confronted, yet it was my experience of running
and my runner’s body that led me to its discovery as more-than-a-label.
And, once discovered as an important point of critical reflection, diagnosis
led me into the bodies of others: into the bodies of those who were
stigmatized, effaced, categorized, and prioritized as a result of their diagnoses.
Suzanne Fleischman (1999, p 6) wrote of and through her own diagnosis that
“when a person suffers from a major illness, the affected organ or body part is
never just a body part. Illnesses serve to activate the metaphoric and symbolic
meanings that body parts take on in every culture.” As a linguist facing her
own, ultimately terminal, illness, she mused about the lexical resources for
understanding disease. As she offered up her own body, discipline, and self,
my own discipline found new branches.
Diagnosis is everywhere. It is the title, as well as topic, of a Netflix
series, one that follows the trajectory of people without diagnoses for
debilitating conditions, crowdsourcing candidate diagnoses to help. It
is a narrative trope in fiction (Jutel, 2016). It is the focus of films and
television shows (Jutel and Jutel, 2017). It infuses graphic novels and
cartoons (Morrison et al, 2011). I read about “sick” buildings and bumble
bees with Alzheimer’s-like disease. Regular emotions are assigned disease
labels (Horwitz and Wakefield, 2007), as are what we might have once
considered “normal” behaviors (Conrad, 2007). Of course, at the same
time, diseased states are also finding their way into normality (Scott, 1990;
Kirk and Kutchins, 1992), as psychiatry, serving as the guardian of deviance
and normality, defines both what is “bad” and what is “sick” (Conrad and
Schneider, 1980; Rosenberg, 2006).
And as this takes place, I find myself returning to Drew Leder’s work
on the absent body. He writes, “While in one sense the body is the most
abiding and inescapable presence in our lives, it is also characterised by its
absence,” and further, that “‘freeing oneself ’ from the body takes on a positive
valuation” (Leder, 1990, pp 1, 69).
I think about his theory through my own body. As a much older woman,
I am now a cyclist rather than a runner. I call my mountain bike my
“wheel chair”; it has wheels and I mainly sit on it. Thinking about the
acquisition of any skill in cycling, say, taking a corner on a mountain trail,
to start with, it is all in the body. I think about where I am going: I shift
down well ahead of time, roll out around the corner, then bank around
the turn, shoulder down, knee up. Whew! Made it. So many thoughts
and bodily positions to keep in my mind. It is difficult. But, once the skill
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Note
1
This is a traditional genealogical framework that “links all animate and inanimate, known
and unknown phenomena in the terrestrial and spiritual worlds. Whakapapa therefore
binds all things. It maps relationships so that mythology, legend, history, knowledge,
tikanga (custom), philosophies and spiritualities are organised, preserved and transmitted
from one generation to the next” (Taonui, 2011).
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Sociology of Health and Illness, 31(5): 762–778.
Brown, P. (1990) ‘The name game: toward a sociology of diagnosis’, The
Journal of Mind and Behavior, 11(3–4): 385–406.
Brumberg, J.J. (2000) Fasting Girls: The History of Anorexia Nervosa,
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Human Conditions into Treatable Disorders, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins
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237
Index
A inactivity 118
academic disciplines instrumental 21, 38n3, 125
anthropology, disciplinary roots in cultural interpersonal dynamics and 194
appropriation and othering 75 interpretation and x, 105, 124, 134,
biographical account of development of research 161, 183
field 13, 225–34 intra-action, physicalist concept of 62n2
conceptual, epistemic, or interpretive shifts in 2, “ladylike” 186
3, 19, 23–5, 44, 61, 160–1 lines/poles of action 27, 29, 31
embodied experience and 13, 223–6, lived body and 2
228–9, 231–4 meaning and 2, 5, 6, 28, 31, 33, 37, 123
emergence of during the Industrial Revolution 1 Migrant Trail Walk 211
epistemic authority, dominance, and “molecular action of art” 62n10
legitimacy 49, 90, 93, 113, 231 moralizing 109
historical development of 1–5, 21–6, 45, 160–1, narrative, power to direct action 38n3
223–4 Nervous Conditions 96, 99
interdisciplinarity 48–50, 52, 55, 61, 62n6, 70 obesity and corrective/preventative action 111
positivism, in relation to ix–x, 2, 13, 21–2, 24, 231 as object of sociological study 1, 2
see also anthropology; Black studies; economics; as objective, observable behavior and practices 7,
medicine; psychology; public health; quantum 22, 27, 33, 35–6, 66, 78–9, 97, 110
physics; sociology; sociology of diagnosis; performative 3, 36
theoretical traditions physical activity 139, 211, 226, 227
accountability 25, 137, 141, 142, 147, 192, 209 pragmatic 123, 231
see also gender, accountability to normative pragmatist perspectives on 7, 33
standards; self, as achievement praxis see praxeological approaches
action protest 206
acts of resistance 122, 150n3 racism, institutional acts of 187
biological conditions of 2 rational 22
the body and xix, 1, 2, 5, 20, 31, 168 religious devotion 161
capitalism and 123 routinized, everyday 6, 27, 139
civil disobedience 203, 215, 219 sensible 72
collective action 1, 26, 36, 99, 123, 207, 213 social construction and 24–5
conforming/disconforming 101, 144, 186, 219 solidarity 219
culture as epiphenomenon/condition of 22 song, embodied in action 62n8
dance 99 speech acts 3
disciplinary 161, 178, 183, 186, 187 subjective 178
discourse and narrative serve as “hermeneutic talk and 161
hooks” for 165 uncomfortable 211
disobedience 178 vocabularies of motive and 159
dispositions and 78, 121, 171, 174n3, 189 “vulnerability” and 111
eating 168–9 “witnessing” 171
embodied experience and 204 see also behavior; interaction; intersubjectivity;
emotions and 184, 206 motifaction; phenomenology; social action;
habitus and 69, 78–9 symbolic interactionism
health outcomes and 121 activism
human 21, 22 activists, white, middle-class, from the Christian
identity and 3, 61, 165 left 202
as improvisational response 69 anti-SOA 216
238
INDEX
breast cancer activism 11, 133, 134, 136, 138, 142 “neo-liberal politics” and 123
comfort/discomfort 213 Nervous Conditions 91, 95, 97, 103, 104
cultural tools 203 “presence”/“dys-appearance” and 103
embodied dynamics 203, 204 structure/agency relationship 135, 150n3, 195
embodied tactics, to see/feel violence and expose Ahmed, Sara 59, 178, 217–18
injustices 213 Alcoff, Linda Martín 204, 217, 220n3
embodied vulnerability and 203, 205, 206, 212, Alexander, Jeffrey C. 2, 6, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 25,
213, 215, 219 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 37, 38n7, 39n11
fat activism 113, 118 American pragmatism xviii, 6
high-r isk 203, 205, 209, 212, 215, 217, see also theoretical traditions, pragmatism
219, 220n2 Anlo-Ewe people (southeastern Ghana) 9, 10, 66,
interpretive effort and 212, 213, 214, 217, 219 67, 68, 69, 75, 76, 78, 79–80, 84
Migrant Trail Walk and 209 caricatured as having an “uber sense” 76
“perceptual communities,” activism, unsettling sensorium 69–70
affect and the forging of 213 ways of knowing 10
privilege, social and embodied 205, 214–15, 217, see also language, Anlo-Ewe (language community
218, 220n2 in Ghana); seselelãme
sense experiences, mediated by 206 anthropology
US–Mexico border activism 209, 218 approach to the molecular 48
see also social movements; solidarity activism critique of 75
aesthetics xii, 3, 33, 45, 68, 84, 113, 137, disciplinary roots in cultural appropriation and
140–4, 179 othering 75
artistic sensibility and 141 psychological anthropology 68
Black girl dress aesthetics 184, 192–3 psychology, disciplinary distinction from 83
pleasure and 149 sensory anthropology 69–70
symmetry 137, 142 sociology, disciplinary distinction from 22
vice, aesthetics of 232 Aphramor, Lucy 114, 115, 125
see also beauty; the senses Aposhyan, Susan 66
affect xi, 12, 13, 27, 37, 160, 206–7, 208, 211, 219 Aristotle 47
attention, directed by affective experience 205 artistic research
bodily, sense experience and 205, 206–7 biomythographics of 48
definition 220n1 embodied 9, 44, 48, 49, 60–1, 62n3
embodied display of 210 arts
embodied vulnerability and 203, 206–7, 209, artistic sensibility 141
211–12, 215, 219 capitalism and 60
emotion, interpretive and signifying system of decolonial art and the visibilization of molecular
affect 205, 206–7 violence 48
interaffectivity 6 “duty to beauty” and 229
modal thinking and sensitivity to 70, 79 humanities and 57
physiological examples of 218 installation art centered on body image 148
postmodernism and 24 “molecular action of art” 62n10
power of 205, 214 molecularity of identity evident in art 60
sensemaking and 206–7, 214–15, 217 performative arts project and seselelãme 77
social meaning of 214 ASA (American Sociological Association) xviii, 231
uncomfortable and unsettling 212, 213 Atkinson, Michael 110
see also emotion attention
Agawu, Kofi 75, 76, 83 agency and 124
agency 3–4, 31, 204, 219 analytical 5, 6
appearance/disappearance of the body and 104 attentional topography 5
beauty and 135 beauty and 133, 135, 230
Black bodies, colonialism and 91, 95, 104 biographical disruption/repair 133, 170
Black girls’ bodies and 183–4, 195, 104 Black girls and 189
bodily agency, constraining forces 31 bodily insistence and 213
bodily experience and 204 bodily vulnerability and 205–6, 215, 217
contingency of 183, 219 the body, attentiveness and inattentiveness to 75,
gender and 97–8, 104, 122, 135 79, 123, 159, 164, 167, 171–2
health and 118, 122, 123, 124 breathing and 170, 171
individual agency, post-structuralist, defamiliarized 95
deconstructionist, and postmodern desire and 99
emphasis of 4 disattention/inattention 5, 111, 159
mastectomy and 135 eating and 168
material agency 4 embodied experience and 160
239
INTERPRETING THE BODY
240
INDEX
structure/agency 124, 135, 150n3, 195, 219 body work 12, 181, 183
subjectivity-idealism vs reason-society 22 colonialism and 104
in Western philosophy 4 controlling images and 181, 182, 183, 186, 191,
see also body/mind dichotomy 192, 193, 194, 195nn3–4
biology/physiology discrimination 193
biochemistry 44–50 disrespect towards Black girls 186–7
biological conditions of action 2, 100 dress code and appearance 12, 179, 180, 184,
biological sex 22, 33, 225, 226 192–4, 195
biotic qualities of seselelãme 67 embodied reverse discourse 12, 181–3, 186,
cells 44, 45, 49 188, 196n5
essentialism 90, 122 loudness and laughter 12, 179, 180, 184, 186,
eyes 8, 28, 30, 82, 164, 167, 170, 186, 205, 229 187–8, 189, 190–2, 195
feminist materialisms and 4 macrostructural constraints and microlevel
frameworks of meaning and 7 interactions 183, 186, 192, 195
hair 30, 31, 72–3, 135, 192, 193, 194 misogynoir 178, 179, 180–3, 184, 192, 194,
hormones 47, 50 195, 195n1
lived body, in relation to 22 mis/reading of Black girls’ bodies in educational
men’s health and 122 settings 179, 184–94
menstruation 227 othering of 179, 180, 188
molecular 45, 48 outsider status in classrooms 178, 192, 194
morphology 73–4, 218 policing of Black girls 179, 180, 185–6, 187,
muscle 81, 103, 138–40, 150n5–6, 170, 229 191–3, 195
Nervous Conditions 100 quietness and silence 12, 102, 186, 188,
neurobiology, neurosciences and 45, 66, 85n11 189–90, 192
physiognomy 22, 229 racism 187, 188
physiology 45, 83, 115 school discipline and 178–9, 191, 195
piloerection (goosebumps) 73 sexuality 88, 98, 100, 102, 193, 194
racism and 91, 92 stereotypes 187, 188, 190, 193–4, 195
as raw material 22 symbolic interactionism 12, 183–4
skin 30, 34, 39n9, 48, 51, 68, 72, 80, 81, 91, 98, teachers/students interactions 12, 179, 184, 185,
102, 135, 138, 139, 178, 218 186–8, 189–90, 191, 192, 194, 195
stuff of life 64 TWA (talking with attitude) 186
testosterone 46–7 see also Black bodies; Blackness; race and racism
as unsociological matter 2 Black Lives Matter 104, 119
see also body; breasts; DNA; materiality/ Black studies 52, 57, 60, 62n8
materialism/matter Blackness 60, 180
Black bodies 88 anti-Black discourses/practices 12, 60, 179,
Black hair 30, 31, 192, 193, 194 180–3, 188, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195
Black men’s bodies 10, 88, 89, 91–2, 94, 95, 104 anti-Black linguistic racism 185
Black women’s bodies 10, 31, 34, 48, “blaccent” 185
88–90, 92–4, 104, 150n5 “Black bitch”/“nigger bitch” 181, 182
colonialism and 10, 48, 89–105 passim Black girls’ bodies in educational settings 178,
docility, strategy and refusal 100, 189 189, 190, 191
female strength 93, 150n5 Black play 191, 196n7
Floyd, George 88 Black speech and Black volume as being
passivity, framing and resistance to 188, 190, 195 unruly 191
skin 30, 34, 39n9, 48, 97, 178, 218 female controlling images 181, 182, 183, 186,
targeted by police 88, 119, 218 191, 192, 193, 194, 195nn3–4
see also Black girls’ bodies in educational settings; indigo and 48
Blackness; race and racism misogynoir 178, 179, 180–3, 184, 192, 194,
Black, David 38n3 195, 195n1
see also motifaction the molecular and 55, 56, 57
Black girls’ bodies in educational settings 12, 95–6, “nigga” 182, 196n6
100, 102–3, 178–95 passim performance of 191
agency 97, 104, 183–4, 195 phenomenology of Blackness 89, 90–2, 104, 105
anti-Black discourses/practices 12, 179, 180–3, racializing representations of Black people 180–1
188, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195 sound of 185, 191
Black talk, backtalk, sass 12, 179, 180, US 180–1
184–8, 190, 192, 195 see also Black bodies; Black girls’ bodies in
Blackness 178, 189, 190, 191 educational settings; race and racism
bodily negotiations interpreted from Black girls’ Blaxter, Mildred 223, 224, 231
own perspective 12, 179 Blumer, Herbert 2, 6
241
INTERPRETING THE BODY
body sociology of the body 20, 23, 27–8, 33, 37–8, 195
abject, deviant, unruly 10, 110, 112, 138, 178, 193 stigmatized 142, 193, 205, 233
absence from sociological theory/disembodied as symbol 1, 3, 20, 31, 144, 167, 233
approach 1, 19, 21–3, 234 symbolic dimensions of 9, 11, 12, 22,
absencing/presencing and appearance/ 26–7, 35–7, 159, 161, 183
disappearance of the body 10, 13, 32, 88, taken-for-granted medium 1
94, 99, 101, 103–5, 169, 189, 205, 227, 228, as text 31, 32
229, 233–4 white bodies 31, 88, 92, 94, 104, 105, 115, 217
agency and 3, 4, 31, 91, 95, 103, 104, 123, 204 see also biology/physiology; Black bodies; Black
biological perspectives 2, 4, 7, 22, 33, 48, 90, 92, girls’ bodies in educational settings; body
122, 225–6 projects; embodiment; female bodies; gender,
brown bodies 59, 94, 218 gendered body/embodiment; lived body; male
classed bodies 13, 125, 217 bodies; materiality/materialism/matter
commodification of 2, 92, 113 body/mind dichotomy 4, 66, 83, 90
corporeal schemas and 68, 81, 89, 91 Integral Yoga 158, 167, 171
see also bodily ways of knowing; habitus mind–body connection 37, 70, 73
discipline and control 2, 9, 10, 38n2, 92, 100, “mind–body problem” 80, 85n8
101, 124, 161, 179, 182, 191, 195 mind as embodied 73
in early sociology 1–2, 19, 21–3 mind versus matter 22, 49
“ecstatic” and “recessive” body 99, 103 rational mind over the emotional body 112
see also Leder, Drew see also binary hierarchies; Cartesian dualism;
food, diet, and the body 116, 166, Descartes, René; Integral Yoga, body/
168–9, 213 mind dualism
gender nonconforming 142, 148–9 body politic 1, 2, 124, 186
as ground of social experience and body projects 3, 25, 30, 31, 110
consciousness 204 “beautifying” body projects 30
as ideality–materiality 8, 20, 37 male obesity and gendered “body project” 110,
identity and 3, 9, 13, 53, 56, 92, 133, 149, 112, 118
183, 217 physical body as project or work 31
illness, disease and 100–3, 112, 133, 138, 142, see also body work; Shilling, Chris
229, 233 body studies 19, 89, 90–1
Indigenous bodies 70, 89 body work
as inscriptive surface 13, 21 Black girls 12, 181, 183
institutional, discursive, corporeal definition 3, 182
constitution 182 embodied reverse discourse and 182
interpreting the body 7–14 male bodies 112, 113
see also interpretation moral aspects of 3, 13
interpretive “grasp on the world” 26 see also body projects
malleability of 2, 25 Booth, Douglas 226
material agency 4, 32 Bordo, Susan 24, 30, 31, 32, 39n9, 111, 135
as material-semiotic xviii, 9, 55 Bourdieu, Pierre 6, 20, 29, 62n7, 90, 110, 122,
materiality of xviii, 2, 3, 4–5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 22, 25, 123, 160
26, 27, 30, 31, 34, 36, 37, 53, 55, 56, 58, 84, see also habitus; theoretical traditions,
85n8, 89, 114, 123, 125, 140, 217 Bourdieusian/practice theory
meaning and matter 8 breast cancer 33, 133, 150n4
medicalization of 113, 116, 123 1998 Women’s Health and Cancer Rights
modification 8, 28, 35, 36, 182 Act 150n1
mortification 213 American Cancer Society, “Reach to Recovery
mutability of 2, 3, 54 Program” 133–4
as object separate from self 167 BRA-Day international 133–4
ontology of 3–4, 19–20, 25, 48 BRCA gene variants (BReast CAncer) 136, 147
pleasure 89, 98, 99, 192 breast cancer activism 11, 133–4, 136, 138
self, body’s role in construction of 8, 19, 25, breast cancer culture 147, 149, 150n4
27, 33 disruption of femininity and ideals of feminine
as situation 20, 26, 28, 37 beauty 33, 133, 134, 139, 148, 149
social collectivity, co-constituted by flesh and embodiment of 33–4, 134, 142, 149, 150n4
blood bodies 123 ideologies of femininity and 134
as social fact worthy of study 25 imperative of concealment 133, 137, 138, 141, 145
social movements and 149, 203–4, 213, 218 “Look Good Feel Better Program” 133–4
social and symbolic construction of xviii, 3, 4, 7, narratives of recovery 11, 133–6, 137,
9, 14, 25, 27, 36–7, 88, 89, 90, 105, 112, 124, 139–40, 142, 149
159, 180, 182, 183 previvors 147
242
INDEX
restoration of femininity 33, 34, 133–4, 142, architectures of power 10, 90, 92, 93
144, 148 British 93
survivors 34, 136, 138, 143 Canada 115
see also breast reconstruction; breasts; mastectomy colonial education 95–7, 103–5
breast reconstruction 34, 133–44, 137, decolonial art 48
138–40, 141, 148–9, 150n1, 150nn6–7 gender and 10, 57, 89, 91–3, 103, 105
autologous reconstruction 138, 139, 141, 150n6 genocide 53
cosmetic surgery 134, 135, 138, 139 Indigenous 53, 89, 115
as deformed and horrific 137, 138, 139, 141 neocolonialism 67
flat closure and living flat 11, 34, 134, 135–6, 137, norms 98, 100, 101, 104
138, 140, 141, 143, 144, 145, 147–9, 150n2 patriarchy 89, 96, 100
pressure to undergo reconstruction 144 postcolonial analytic perspectives xii, 10
queerness and flat closure 148 postcolonial modernity 104
silicone implants 139, 150n7 precolonial Nigeria 93
see also breast cancer; breasts; mastectomy race and 53, 58, 67, 88, 91–7, 99, 102, 103
breasts regimes of knowledge 48, 52
femininity and 32, 33, 34, 133, 134, 138, 144, 147 Sartre, theories of 95 see also Sartre, Jean-Paul
“Frankenboobies” 137 settler society 53
material feeling and meaning 34 see also decolonization; gender, as colonial
prosthetic 134, 140, 141, 145, 150n1 construct; gender on the post-colony;
sexuality and 98, 146–7 Nervous Conditions
as symbol 32, 33, 34, 133–4, 136, 137, 138, 144, Columbia University 38n4
147, 148 commodification and commoditization see
symmetry 137, 140–2, 149 body, commodification of; capitalism,
see also breast cancer; breast reconstruction; commodification and commoditization;
mastectomy globalization; male bodies, commodification of;
Broom, Dorothy 133, 138 seselelãme, commodification of
Brown, Phil 223 Conrad, Peter 113, 233
Brumberg, Joan 230 constructionism xiin5, 4, 5, 90
Bull, Michael 70 cultural construction of technoscientific
Bunsell, Tanya 150n5 knowledge 45
Butler, Judith 3, 25, 36, 37, 62n7, 204 deconstructionism 4
Byrd, Jodi 53 dematerialized 4
gendered 44, 112, 122, 227
C hermeneutic 31–3
Campos, Paul 114, 115, 116–17 material-semiotic construction of the body 9
capitalism 1, 2, 23, 124 materialization of “social facts” 25
art production and 60 molecular 44, 46
commodification and commoditization 2, 9, 67, racialized 44, 180, 184, 185
73, 77, 83, 84, 92, 113 strong constructionist perspectives, critique
consumer culture 2 of 4–5, 9
health inequities and 119–25 see also social constructionism
industrial capitalism 1 Cook, Jennifer 162
macro-social factors impacting health 119 cosmetic surgery 3, 135, 137
markets 67, 77, 119, 120, 148, 232 see also beauty; body projects; body work
neoliberal capitalism 11, 119 COVID-19 pandemic xix, 62n4, 202
race and 57, 59, 92 “dual COVID-19/obesity crisis frame” 109, 111,
see also economics; Marxian perspectives 113, 115, 118
Carel, Havi 224 Crawford, Robert 2, 114, 123, 125
Carroll, Rebecca 184–5 critical race studies 9, 44–5, 55, 88, 217
Cartesian dualism 21, 83, 90, 99 critical studies 223, 227
see also Descartes, René CSM (critical studies on men) 110, 121–3, 124, 125
Champagne, Anne Marie xii, xviii, 1–18, 19–43, on health inequalities 119–20, 125
67, 133 on obesity 112, 113–15, 123, 125–6
Chen, Mel Y. 47–8, 50, 62n4 Crossley, Nick 27, 90, 91, 162, 204, 205
Cheng, Anne Anlin 59 Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly 173
Chentsova-Dutton, Yulia E. 80–1 Csordas, Thomas 2, 31, 69
Cheyne, George 112 Culp, Andrew 55
Chicago School 38n4 cultural sociology 6, 19, 20, 23, 26, 27–8, 30, 31,
Classen, Constance 69 32, 33, 35, 37, 38, 174n3
collective consciousness 36 cultural and cognitive sociology xviii, 6, 85n9
colonialism 48, 53, 58, 89, 91–2, 100, 105 Yale University’s Center for Cultural Sociology xviii
243
INTERPRETING THE BODY
see also SPCS (Strong Program cultural sociology); weight-loss culture 111
theoretical traditions, cultural sociology Western culture 123
cultural studies 48, 55 Cyr, Monica 115
culture 19–20
“absent presence” of culture and the body in early D
sociology 21–3 Damasio, Antonio 66, 85n11
body and society, as constitutive of 8, 26 D’Andrade, Roy 68
collective-formative interpretive framework and 5–6 Dangarembga, Tsitsi 10, 89, 92, 94–8
collective representations and 8, 21 see also Nervous Conditions
cultural analysis definition 34 Dash, Julie 48
cultural analysis and perspective xii, 8, 27, 34– Davis, Kathy 3
5, 55 decolonization 57
cultural appropriation 9, 67, 73, 75–6, 80, 83, decolonial art 48
84, 85n10 decolonial grammar of colors 60
cultural codes 6, 8, 20, 28–31, 32, 33, 37 decolonial scholars 93
cultural and cognitive schema 29, 68, 183, 205 decolonial thought 61
cultural discourse 9, 48, 111, 125, 180 see also colonialism; postcolonialism
cultural forms 21, 31 deconstructionism see theoretical traditions:
cultural history 229, 230 deconstructionism, literary criticism
cultural meaning 29, 30 DeFrantz, Thomas 54
cultural model 68 DeGloma, Thomas ix–xiii, xviii, xix, 5–6, 230
cultural phenomenology 69, 204 Deleuze, Gilles 24, 44, 50–5, 56, 62n10
cultural pragmatics 19, 38n1 A Thousand Plateaus 51–2
cultural psychology 80–1, 83 Descartes, René 84n2, 90
cultural script 29 see also Cartesian dualism
cultural turn in sociology 25 deviance 112–113
culture structures x, 25, 31, 32, 37 deviant bodies 10, 100, 110
cultures 53, 75, 90, 112, 115 in diagnosis 233
Durkheim’s conception of 26 weight/fat and 112–13
emotion, cultural foundations of 6, 12–13, 37, see also body: abject, deviant, unruly;
80, 205–6 disability; othering
interpretation, signification and xii, 12–13, 26, Dewey, John 37
32, 68, 142 diagnosis 13, 71, 134, 223–5, 232–3
The Interpretation of Cultures 34 breast cancer 134, 136, 139, 141, 145, 147, 149
interpretive traditions, cultural approaches x, 6, of colonialism’s effect 104
28, 31, 33, 68 embodiment and 233, 234
material culture 68 overweight as a diagnostic category 232, 233
matter, distinct from 2, 3, 4, 48, 49 racial categories and 231
matter/meaning and xii, xviii, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, stories of 224
14, 20, 21, 23, 25–7, 30, 31, 44, 45, 48, 49, 56, “thingness” and the emergence of diagnoses 232
57, 84, 135 see also sociology of diagnosis
as “motifactional” force 20, 22, 36–7, 38 Dilthey, Wilhelm 24, 32
postmodern crisis of meaning and cultural disability 60, 79, 82, 118, 121
thematization of materiality and the able-bodied privilege 215
body 23–6 disabilities, persons with 2, 79, 82
SPCS (Strong Program cultural sociology) and seselelãme and 79, 82
relative autonomy of culture 20, 28–31, 38 discourse
as symbolic dimension of the body and social analytic perspective xii, 4–5, 24, 232
life 8, 19, 25, 27, 38 anti-Black 12, 179, 180, 188, 193, 194
visual culture 68 biochemical discourse 48
see also anthropology; cultural sociology; cultural Black talk and voice, discursive misreading 185
studies; meaning; ritual; SPCS (Strong bodily detachment, as a means of cultivating 158,
Program cultural sociology); SPCS of the body 164, 168
and embodiment body as “discursive tabula rasa” 27
culture, types of body, presencing discourses of 227
Black culture 191 body, as productive of 182
body-oriented consumer culture 112 body as site of discursive interpretation 161
breast cancer culture 147, 149, 150n4 breast cancer discourse 133, 134, 146, 148, 149
gendered culture of slenderness 116 collective sentiment, social force and (discursive
“healthism” 125 depth) 26, 35
late-capitalist consumer culture 2 counternarrative and 12, 181
popular culture 180, 182, 184, 224 cultural discourse 9, 48
244
INDEX
245
INTERPRETING THE BODY
246
INDEX
247
INTERPRETING THE BODY
Fowler, Lorenzo N. 229 Goffman, Erving 2, 3, 6, 25, 27, 29, 36, 116, 179,
Fowler, Orson S. 229 183, 184, 195n2
Frank, Arthur W. 2, 23, 36, 182, 195 Gordon, James S. 66
Friedman, Asia xii, xviii, 1–18, 29, 67, 213 Gough, Brendan 112, 113, 116
Friedman, Samuel R. 120 Gould, Deborah 205–6,
214, 220n1
G Graham, Hilary 121
Gard, Michael 109, 111, 113 Greedharry, Mrinalini 10, 88–108
Geertz, Clifford xiiinn, 4–5, 20, 31, 34–5, 36, 68, Green, Kyle D. 162, 165, 174n3
160, 209 Greene, Kevin J. 75
Interpretation of Cultures 34–5 Griffith, R. Marie 158, 161
gender 3, 5, 10 Grosz, Elizabeth 38n6, 51
accountability to 137, 141, 142, 147, 192 Guattari, Félix 44, 50–5, 56, 62n10
binary sex-gender order 3, 4, 29, 32, 38–9n8, 47,
51, 92–3, 124 H
as colonial construct 89, 105 habitus 6, 55, 62n8, 69, 78
doing gender 6 definition 69, 78
gender justice 88, 123, 125 religious habitus 161
gender nonconforming body 142, 148–9 see also Bourdieu, Pierre
gender performance 3, 191, 192 HAES® (Health-At-Every-Size) 114, 118, 125
gendered body/embodiment 3, 9, 10, 55, 61, 89, Haraway, Donna 225
92, 94, 100, 105, 110, 111, 115, 116, 117, 136,
Hardey, Michael 112
137, 150nn4–5, 186, 193, 215–17, 218
Haupt, Adam 84, 85n10
male/female binary coded as objectivity/
subjectivity binary 38n6 health
norms/ideologies of 3, 11, 31, 32, 89, 99, 111, 1980 Black Report 120
133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 140, 142, 147, 148, agency and 118, 122, 123, 124
149, 150nn3–4, 150n9, 191 behavioral focus 110, 113, 114, 118,
race and gender as material and substantial 120–3, 124, 125
identities 55–6 breasts, softness and meanings of wellness 34
social construction of 3, 88, 89, 90, 116, capitalism and 2, 11, 119, 120, 122, 123,
135, 227 124, 125
testosterone, gender, and sexuality diagnosis 224, 232–3
46–7, 50 health inequalities 10–11, 118–23, 124–5
see also femininity; gender on the importance of normative appearance 232
post-colony; masculinity; transgender individual responsibility and 119, 120, 121,
gender on the post-colony 10, 89, 105
122, 125
British colonialism 93
inequity 111, 114, 117, 118–22, 123, 124, 125
colonial patriarchy 89, 95, 96, 100, 102
macro-social factors impacting health 119, 120
gendering the colonial body 92–4
gendering operates in parallel ways to medicalization of 11, 113, 116, 123
racialization 92–3 men, masculinities, and health 10,
intersectional phenomenological approach 10 109–26 passim
literature as organic theory 94–5 morality and 109, 113, 118, 121, 229
see also Nervous Conditions neoliberalism and health inequalities 119–20, 121,
genealogy 7, 91, 230, 235n1 123, 124–5
Germov, John 116 social justice and 119, 121, 122, 123, 125
Geurts, Kathryn Linn 9–10, 66–87 UK 120, 121
Culture and the Senses 75 US 111, 119, 120
Ghanaian see Anlo-Ewe people yoga and 164, 165, 166, 192
(southeastern Ghana) welfare state and 120
Giddens, Anthony 2, 3 see also breast cancer; diagnosis; obesity; obesity
Gimlin, Debra 3, 25, 182
and male bodies; public health; sociology
Gingras, Jacqui 115
of diagnosis
Giugni, Marco 204
globalization 23 healthism 114, 122, 125
seselelãme and 67, 69, 73–7 Heidegger, Martin 90
Global North 9, 66, 67, 73, 75, 77, 80, 82, 83, hermeneutics 8, 24, 33–4
84, 202 body as hermeneutical situation 20, 37
see also colonialism; globalization; postcolonialism hermeneutic reconstruction of meaning 20, 28,
Global South 67, 88, 202 30, 31–4, 38
see also colonialism; globalization; postcolonialism Integral Yoga, “hermeneutic hooking” 165–6
248
INDEX
249
INTERPRETING THE BODY
bodily practices and 11, 13, 158, 159, 161, 166, schemas 183, 205
168, 172, 173, 203 scholars’ interpretive approaches:
body as interpretive medium, conduit, to narratives 174n3; to religious
resource 37, 136, 144, 161, 204, 213 practices 160–1
body’s dependency on 8, 20 seselelãme, as an interpretive template 68
collective/shared 25, 159, 172 see also seselelãme, interpretive distortion of
as concept for thinking about the body 5, 7 social interaction and 11, 12, 134, 146, 149, 179,
culture structures and 32, 33 183, 191
as description/explanation x, 1, 34–6 social movements as resource for interpreting
discourse as interpretive space/framework 5, 10, embodied experience 203, 204
27, 136, 149, 179, 180, 185–6 social privilege as interpretive framework 214
discursive–interactionist interpretive sociology as interpretive science ix, 1, 2, 5, 23, 26,
framework 183–4 31, 36, 37
ethnography: interpretive benefits 162; solidarity, interpretive instantiations of 203, 212
participant observation and interpretive systems of xii, 12, 27, 32, 134
inquiry 207, 208 talk as interpretive link between yoga practice and
European beauty aesthetics and interpretation of Integral Yoga’s symbolic world 158, 167
Black styles 193 thick description 35
as focal metaphor 5 vocabularies of motive and 159, 163–5
fuses matter with meaning 21 war on obesity, weight/fatness and 110, 111, 114,
gendered bodies and 10, 29, 89, 94, 124, 136, 118, 124
137, 144, 178, 185, 186, 191, 215–18 Zerubavel, Eviatar, interpretive approach 230
hermeneutics 24, 31–4, 165, 166 see also attention, interpretive process and;
historical contingency and 74, 179, 183 epistemology; Interpretive Lenses in Sociology;
interpreting the body 7–14 knowledge production; meaning; SPCS
interpretive authority, positionality, and (Strong Program cultural sociology); theoretical
validity 10, 12, 23, 24, 37, 179, 191, 231 traditions; ways of knowing
interpretive communities: Integral Yoga 158, Interpretive Lenses in Sociology 5–7
162, 164, 173; online 136, 143–4; protest 206 collective-formative 5–6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13
“interpretive epistemic mode” xiiin2 interactive-emergent 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13
interpretive filters 11, 137 psychosocial 6–7, 8, 10
interpretive frameworks 6, 143, 173, 183, 186, intersectional analysis 10, 89, 179, 195
191, 212 interdisciplinary intersectionality 48–9, 52, 55,
interpretive labor 13, 212, 215 61, 62n6, 62n9
language and the interpretation of somatic intersectional discursive frames 184
experience 12, 173 intersectional subjugations 178, 179
literary form and 94 see also theoretical traditions, intersectional
meaning-making and xi, xii, xiiin2, 5, 6, 7, 8, intersubjectivity
12, 24, 28, 30, 31, 34, 160–1, 204, 213–14 individualism, in contrast to 82, 83, 84
minimal/maximal interpretation see interactive-emergent interpretive lens 6, 8, 10, 11,
maximal interpretation 12, 13
misinterpretation of Black girls and Blackness 12, interaffectivity 6
179, 185, 186, 189–91, 194 intercorporeality 6, 13, 183
misogynoir as anti-Black interpretive as interpretive process by which the body comes
repertoire 179, 195 to know itself 90–1
nonpositivist 231 interrelationality 26, 173
oppression and victimhood, interpretive lens 89 men’s intersubjective meanings 123
phenomenology and 13, 105, 160 seselelãme’s intersubjectivity 9, 80–3, 84, 85nn8–9
postmodernism and 4, 23–4 see also social interaction; symbolic interactionism
power/powerful contexts and 5, 7, 10, 29, 30,
118, 146, 179, 191, 215 J
as process involving: classification 20; interplay Jamison, Andrew 206
between discourse and practice 161, 169; Jay, David 143
selection/deselection 1, 5; signification 32; Jewel (singer/songwriter) 134, 138
technique and identity 9 Jewishness 56, 57, 60
raced bodies and 10, 89, 94, 178, 187, 190, 193, Johnson, Boris 109–10, 113
215–18 Johnson, Mark 66, 73–4
reflexive engagement with xi, 8 Johnston, Erin F. 11–12, 155–77
reinterpretation 12, 23, 89, 105, 110, 124, 125, Joseph, Nicole 186, 187, 188, 192
159, 163–5, 166, 196n5, 215 Jude, Julia 67, 76–7
reinterpreting beauty 11, 134–8, 140–9 Jutel, Annemarie 13, 223–37
relationality and 90 Diagnosis: Truths and Tales 224
250
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normative beauty 11, 133, 134, 135, 137, 141, Mbembe, Achille 92
144, 149 McCulley, Susan 73–4, 76, 77
normative feminine embodiment 11, 134, 142, McNaughton, Darlene 112
144, 150n4 McWhorter, John 185, 196n6
normative ideologies of gender 135, 150n3 Mead, George Herbert 2, 6, 21, 22
prosthetics 134, 141, 145, 150n1 meaning
queerness, proximity to 144, 146–9 activation of meaning through illness 233
“Scar Project” 143 affect and 27, 210, 211, 214, 217
scars 133, 137, 139, 142–4, 149 approaches to xi, xviii, 6, 8, 10, 19, 20, 27, 31–5,
sexuality and sexual attractiveness 146, 147 68, 160–1, 203–4
symmetry aesthetics 137, 140–2, 149 beauty, meaning of the breast in cancer
unilateral 136, 142 recovery 134–5, 138, 149
see also breast cancer; breast reconstruction; behavior as a conduit of meaning 204
breasts behavioral relation between objectivities 33
materiality/materialism/matter binaries, relations of difference/opposition and 3,
academic disciplines and approaches to 2, 4–5, 12, 29, 38n7, 51
13, 21–3, 45, 48–9, 69–70, 223, 224–5, 234 body idiom 184
binary oppositions and see binary hierarchies; body work and 182
body/mind dichotomy collective, shared systems of ix, xi, 5, 6, 11, 19,
body, materiality of 2, 4–5 22, 24, 25, 26, 32, 33, 36, 37, 161, 183, 172,
boundaries between meaning and matter 3 184, 212–14
breast reconstruction and 33–4 collective representations and 8, 29, 36, 37, 38
constructionism and 3, 4, 5, 9 as core structures of self and identity ix
definition of 49 cultural codes and 6, 8, 30, 32
embodied technique 49, 62nn7–8 culture and 19, 22, 25, 29, 30, 31, 32, 36, 37,
as essence or substance 3, 9, 44 38n7, 55
feminist materialisms/neomaterialisms 4 discourse and ix, 11, 12, 27, 37, 55, 161, 173,
fusion of meaning and matter 8, 27, 31, 37 174, 174n3, 182, 183
material affordance 30, 37 embodiment, embodied experiences/practices
material agency 4 and 12, 20, 27, 31, 32, 33, 34, 37, 59, 93, 161,
material conditions of power and inequality 7, 172, 173, 182, 203, 204, 218
10, 30, 57–8 gender/race and 7, 10, 11, 12, 29, 32, 47, 55, 89,
material-cultural fasciae/webs of meaning 26, 32 93, 111, 123, 134, 135, 217
material determinism 5 hermeneutic reconstruction of 20, 24, 28, 30,
material-semiotic and material-symbolic 31–4, 38
perspectives 9, 27, 46, 47, 50, 55 history of slavery and the meaning of
material specificity 4, 10, 57–8 blackness 60
materialist explanation for health how bodies take on meaning xii, 3–4, 8, 12,
inequity 120, 122 19–21, 27, 30–3, 36–7, 142, 161, 178, 182–4,
meaning and matter see meaning, meaning 213, 217, 233
and matter imagination and 37
new materialisms 6, 45, 53, 55, 62n8 indican, biochemical molecule and the meaning
as passive 9, 22, 47, 90 of blackness 48
physical character of thought 67 “landscapes of meaning” 20, 28, 35 see also Reed,
pleasures of 10, 24, 57, 98–9 Isaac Ariail
postmodern crisis of meaning and 23–6 meaning and matter xii, xviii, 3–4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 20,
post-structuralism, matter as an effect of power 3 21, 25, 27, 30–4, 37, 47, 48, 55, 59, 89, 111,
prostheses (prosthetics) 134, 141, 145, 150n1 161, 174
race and gender as material and substantial meaninglessness: free play/experimentation,
identities 55–6 variety, and the flattening of meaning 24, 30,
the senses and sensation 24, 26, 27, 38, 66, 68, 59, 232
69–70, 72, 78, 79, 82, 90–1, 98, 100, 139, 160, moles, meaning of 51
169, 173 objective/subjective ix, 24, 25, 33, 36, 69, 70,
song, materiality of 49, 62n8 78, 123, 161, 173, 174, 183, 214
see also biology/physiology; body; poles of meaning delimit lines or poles of
body/mind dichotomy potential action 31
Mauss, Marcel 62nn7–8, 90, 160 postmodern crisis of meaning 23–6
maximal interpretation 20, 28, 34–7, 38 power and 3, 5, 6, 7, 10, 27, 29, 30–1, 32, 51,
definition 35 60, 182, 183, 218
minimal/maximal interpretations, process of signification 26
difference 35–6 as psychic structures 6
see also Reed, Isaac Ariail religious frameworks and 213–14
252
INDEX
religious practice and 160, 174, 174n3 molecules of technique-identity 9, 46, 47, 55–
seselelãme: distortions of its organic meanings 67; 7, 58–9
meaning of 78 performance studies 9, 44, 58
sign and 32, 38n7, 135 quantitative methods, epistemic primacy of 44
as social force 23, 184 race as concept of technique/identity 57
social meanings 34, 35, 183 race and gender as material and substantial
sociophysiological 10 identities 55–6
SPCS (Strong Program cultural sociology), radical asymmetry of 9, 44–5, 54–61
meaning-centered approach to body and romance of the molecular 50–5
embodiment 20, 22, 33, 36, 37 as technique and identity 9, 46, 51, 53–4, 57,
symbolic interaction and 12, 183 59, 61
symbols and 3, 7, 8, 19, 20, 21, 27, 30, 31, 34, technique as knowledge 9, 44, 46, 47, 50
36, 37, 38, 55, 160, 161, 174n3, 233 technoscientific knowledge/practices 9, 44, 45–
thick description cultural analysis and 34, 35 50, 53, 57
ubiquity of 30, 32 technoscientific knowledge, racial and gender
webs of meaning 32, 33, 36, 68, 111 hierarchies behind 45–8, 50, 55
wellness, meanings of 34 testosterone 46–7, 50
see also interpretation; signification Monaghan, Lee F. 10–11, 109–32
meaning-making ix, 6, 7, 14, 20, 25, 28, 30, 34, morality 5, 9, 25–6
37, 38n2, 219 body, meaning and moral valence 5, 30–1,
medicine xii, 11, 22, 66, 82 36, 38n6
critiques of 113, 118 body work and 3, 13
epistemic authority of 113 Christian morality 98
surveillance medicine 113, 117 “duty to beauty” as moral endeavor 229–30
see also diagnosis; health; public health; sociology health and 118, 121
of diagnosis interpretation/meaning and ix, 5, 20, 31
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice 19, 25, 62n8, 69, 90–1, 204 moral significance of the molecular 9
Phenomenology of Perception 91 motifaction and 20, 38n3
metaphor 5, 22, 33, 38n3, 50, 51, 82, 84, 118, SPCS of the body and embodiment, moral
159, 161, 166–9, 233 aspects 26, 27, 29, 31, 36–7, 38
Miles, Brittney 12, 178–201 Morris, Edward W. 186, 187
Millard, Jennifer 135 Morris, Monique 189
Miller, Christopher 52–3, 54, 60 motifaction 20, 22, 36–7, 38, 38n3
Miller, William Ian 178 motif and 22, 38n3
Mills, C. Wright 159, 230 power of 36, 38n3
mind–body dualism see binary hierarchies; body/ see also Black, David
mind dichotomy; Descartes, René; Integral Muñoz, José Esteban 59, 135
Yoga, body/mind dualism Myers, Natasha 44, 45
misogynoir 178, 179, 180–3, 184, 192, 194, myth 22, 31, 36, 37, 235n1
195, 195n1 “biomythography” 48, 60, 62n5
modernity 1, 2, 23–4, 69, 89, 92, 93, 96, 104, 118 myths of masculinity 123–4
the molecular
“biomythography” of racialized molecules 48, 60 N
Blackness and 55, 56, 57 NAACP (National Association for the
critical race theory 9, 44–5, 55 Advancement of Colored People) 182
Deleuzo–Guattarian concept of the Nair, Supriya 96
molecular 50–4 neoliberalism 67, 119–20
DNA 45–7, 50 “color-blind” neoliberal racism 181
embodied artistic research see artistic health inequalities and 119–20, 121, 123
research, embodied neoliberal capitalism 11
embodied technique 49, 57, 62nn7–8 patriarchy and 110
hard and soft molecules 45–50 Nervous Conditions (Tsitsi Dangarembga) 10, 89,
interdisciplinary intersectionality 48–9, 52, 55, 95–6, 104–5
61, 62n6 agency 97, 103, 104
knowledge production processes, circular 9, 46 ambivalence 96, 103–4
lead and mercury (metals) 47–8 Anna 97
material-semiotic perspective 9, 46, 47, 50, 55 Babamukuru 95, 96, 97, 98, 100–4, 105
molecular theory of identity 44, 46, 47, 54, Black Zimbabwean women 89, 94
58–60 Blackness, phenomenology of 89, 90–2, 104, 105
molecularization of race and identity 51–5 Chido 95, 97, 99, 105
molecules as materially and socioculturally colonial Christianity 95, 98, 100, 102
constructed 9, 44, 45–8, 50 colonial education 96–8, 100, 102–5
253
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254
INDEX
255
INTERPRETING THE BODY
racialization 3, 9, 12, 30, 46, 47–8, 55, 59, 62, technoscientific 50, 57
75, 84, 88, 89, 91, 92, 94, 100, 104, 180–1, thick description 35
185, 190–3, 202, 215 reverse discourse 181–2, 196n5
racialized bodies 10, 55, 57, 88, 89, 91, 92, 95, Black girls’ bodies, embodied reverse discourse 12,
104, 105, 180, 188, 192, 193, 195 181–3, 186, 188, 195, 196n5
racist tropes 180, 192 body work and 182
school discipline and 181 definition 196n5
structural racism 11, 119 Riediger, Natalie 115
see also Black bodies; Black girls’ bodies ritual 8, 21, 28, 34, 36, 93, 160, 213
in educational settings; Blackness, the Robertson, Roland 21, 22, 23, 25
molecular and Robertson, Steve 110, 121, 122, 123, 124
Rajan-Rankin, Sweta 10, 88–108 Rodriguez, Dylan 206
rational choice 2 Rosenberg, Charles 233
rational actor 21, 22, 23 Rosenberg, Jordy 53
rationality 1, 4, 21, 22, 23, 38n6, 67, 69, 77, 83, Russo, Chandra 12–13, 202–22
90, 91, 92, 112
Reed, Isaac Ariail x, xiiinn2–3, xiiin5, 20, 28, 32 S
Rehabilitation Act (1973) 2 Saldanha, Arun 50–1
relationality 68, 82 Sartre, Jean-Paul 91, 94–5
gender relations, relational power context of 122 Satchidananda, Swami 155, 162, 172
identity formation and 69, 116 Scambler, Graham 118, 119, 120, 122, 125
knowing the self and 90 Schneider, Joseph W. 113, 233
relational approach to the study of the body 70 Scott-Samuel, Alex 110, 119–20
socialization, relational selves 70 self
see also intersubjectivity; social interaction; agency and 3–4, 183, 204
symbolic interaction as an achievement 25
religion and spirituality beauty and 135
colonial Christianity 95, 98, 100, 102 biographical disruption of 33, 133–4, 147–8
embodied religious practices 160–1, 173, 174 body as mutable outer representation of 3
solidarity activism and 209, 212, 213–14 embodied self 25, 31–2, 33, 36, 138, 210
the symbolic in religious practices 37, 160, 174n3 Integral Yoga, eternal/“True Self ” 12, 157, 158,
symbolic/somatic interplay in religious 167, 168, 169, 171–2, 173
practice 11, 161, 174 inward Black self 190
“theologies of the body” 161 narrative, discourse, meaning and the self ix,
see also Integral Yoga 161, 183
research methods power and the self 3
biomythography as 62n5 protean reinvention of 24
critical hermeneutic 57 race, heightened awareness and 218
embodied 203, 211, 219 as rational actor 22
embodied artistic 60–1 religious practices and 160
embodied vulnerability and 13, 203, 206, self-actualization 3
207–11 self-care 2
empiricism of mainstream sociology 231 self-expression 3
ethnography 13, 45, 75, 111, 116, 158, 162, 207, see also SPCS of the body and embodiment, self
208, 216, 219 and society as reciprocally constituted through
experimental 44, 60 the physical body; subjectivity
historical development of semiotics xi, xii, 3
sociological methodologies 2 affordances of the physical body and 30, 31, 34,
interviews 34, 116, 136, 162–3 37, 135
narrative analysis xi material-semiotic perspective 5, 6, 9, 31, 46, 47,
“observant participation” 207 50, 55
participant observation 162–3, 207 mimesis 34
positivism 2, 22, 230–1 see also language; signification; symbols/
“practice as research” 60 symbolization
psychological 80–2 the senses
qualitative ix, x, 208 aesthetic experience and 33, 141–3
quantitative ix, 55 Culture and the Senses 75
research ethics 209 the five-senses model 70
semiotics xi Life of the Senses 70
social pattern analysis 230 mind/body dualism and 90
Strong Program cultural sociology methodological Phenomenology of Perception 91
commitments 20, 28 pleasure and 24, 78, 98
256
INDEX
257
INTERPRETING THE BODY
258
INDEX
US security state 205, 215, 216, 219 Strong Program in cultural sociology see SPCS
US state violence 203, 213, 215, 217, 218, 220n2 (Strong Program cultural sociology)
Witness Against Torture 202, 213 structuralism 3, 53, 56, 62n13
see also activism; research methods, embodied subjectivity
vulnerability and; social movements academic disciplines, biographical account 13,
Solomon Linda, “Mbube” song 85n10 225–34
sound Black subjectivities 179–80
Black girls’ sonic performances 191, 192 body and self 3, 13, 22, 23, 25, 179
laughter 155, 157, 188, 190–2, 195 postmodernism and 24–5
quiet 189–90, 191 religious practices and 160
as signifier 39n10 researcher’s embodied subjectivity 13
silence 171, 188–90, 210 seselelãme, intersubjectivity 9, 82–3, 84
soft vocal tone, association with whiteness 191 subject formation 24–5, 38n2, 92
“sonic flutters” and racialized understandings of subjectivity-idealism vs reason-society 22
accented speech 185 subjectivity/objectivity binary 8, 20, 22, 25
sounding Black 185, 195 see also intersubjectivity; self
volume/loudness, gendered and racialized symbolic interactionism 6, 12, 22, 137, 150n3
stereotypes 186–8, 190–2, 194 Black girls’ bodies in educational
see also the senses; voice settings 12, 183–4
Spatz, Ben 9, 44–65 Society for the Study of Symbolic
Blue Sky Body 62n6 Interaction xviii
What a Body Can Do 62n7 see also Blumer, Herbert; Mead, George
SPCS (Strong Program cultural sociology) 6, 8, 27, Herbert; theoretical traditions,
28, 29, 31, 36–8 symbolic interactionism
critique of 28–9, 38n7 symbols/symbolization 8, 11, 19, 30, 34
cultural sociologist, task of 26 as background against which bodies and social
Durkheim, Emile and 26 action are observed 35
see also SPCS, methodological commitments; body as material/natural symbol 1, 3, 8, 11
SPCS of the body and embodiment body as site of explicit symbolism 161
SPCS, methodological commitments breasts as symbol of female value 144
hermeneutic reconstruction of meaning 20, 28, collective-formative interpretive framework
30, 31–4, 35, 37, 38 and 5–6
maximal interpretation 20, 28, 34–7, 38 emblematization 21, 36, 142
relative autonomy of culture 6, 8, 20, icons and 36, 39n10
28–31, 38 as ideal vs instrumental resource 20, 38
see also SPCS (Strong Program cultural sociology); identity and 55
SPCS of the body and embodiment illness, activation of symbolic meanings of the
SPCS of the body and embodiment 8, 20–1, 23, body 233
26, 27, 37–8 Integral Yoga and symbolic/somatic interplay in
breast cancer-related mastectomy (example) 8, religious practice 11, 159, 161, 173–4
28, 33–4 interpretive sociology and 2
changing brown eyes to blue with contact lenses intuitive symbolic reality 39n11
(example) 8, 28, 30 living reality and 25–26
cultural codes 6, 8, 20, 32, 33, 37 masculinized symbols 112
ideality/materiality binary 8, 20, 22, 25, 37 prayer ties, symbolism of 212, 213
interpretive methodology of 28–37 religious practices understood
meaning and 19–20, 27–38 symbolically 160, 174n3
meaning-centered approach to body and reversibility with matter 31
embodiment 20, 22, 33, 36, 37 social-symbolic field, symbolic “distinctions”
moral aspects 26, 27, 29, 31, 36–7, 38 within 29
ritualized tooth extraction (example) 8, 28, subjective matter, symbolic foundations of 22
35–6 symbolic asymmetries, power, and violence 7,
self and society as reciprocally constituted through 67, 84, 110, 117
the physical body 8, 27, 37, 38 symbolic basis of economic-cum-social
structuration of bodily meaning 8, 27 action 23
subjectivity/objectivity binary 8, 20, 22, 25 symbolic dimensions of the body 3, 7, 8, 9, 11,
symbolic dimension of the corporeal and lived 12, 14, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 30, 31, 35, 36–7, 88,
body 19, 25, 26, 27, 30, 31, 35, 36–7 89, 90, 105, 112, 124, 144, 159, 161, 180, 182,
see also SPCS (Strong Program cultural 183, 184
sociology) symbolic dimensions of social life 8, 25–6, 31
Stoltz, Dustin S. 38n7 symbolic relations of power, reciprocal relation to
Strauss, Claudia 68 meaning 7, 30
259
INTERPRETING THE BODY
260
INDEX
Y Z
yoga see Integral Yoga Zerubavel, Eviatar 6, 230
Yoga Journal 162 Zimmerman, Don H. 6, 137, 141
261