Chapter
Publicly Available
Acknowledgements
-
Janet Price
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Acknowledgements ix
- Openings on the Body: A Critical Introduction 1
-
Section 1: Woman as Body?
- Introduction 17
- 1.1 ‘Theories of Gender and Race’ 21
- 1.2 ‘Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary Views’ 32
- 1.3 ‘Bodies and Biology’ 42
- 1.4 ‘My Body, Myself: How Does a Black Woman Do Sociology?’ 50
- 1.5 ‘Our Bodies, Ourselves: Why We Should Add Old Fashioned Empirical Phenomenology to the New Theories of the Body’ 64
-
Section 2: Sexy Bodies
- Introduction 79
- 2.1 ‘When Our Lips Speak Together’ 82
- 2.2 ‘The Nose’ and ‘Taste’ 91
- 2.3 ‘Toward a Genealogy of Black Female Sexuality: The Problematic of Silence’ 93
- 2.4 ‘Body Matters: Cultural Inscriptions’ 105
- 2.5 ‘Lesbian Bodies: Tribades, Tomboys and Tarts’ 111
- 2.6 ‘F2M: The Making of Female Masculinity’ 125
- 2.7 ‘NO BODY is “Doing It”: Cybersexuality’ 134
- 2.8 ‘The Hot Rod Bodies of Cybersex’ 140
-
Section 3: Bodies in Science and Biomedicine
- Introduction 145
- 3.1 ‘A Burst of Light: Living with Cancer’ 149
- 3.2 ‘Breast Cancer: An Adventure in Applied Deconstruction’ 153
- 3.3. ‘Natural Facts: A Historical Perspective on Science and Sexuality’ 157
- 3.4 ‘Menopause: The Storm before the Calm’ 169
- 3.5 ‘The Egg and the Sperm: How Science has Constructed a Romance Based on Stereotypical Male-Female Roles’ 179
- 3.6 ‘Disciplining Mothers: Feminism and the New Reproductive Technologies’ 190
- 3.7 ‘The Biopolitics of Postmodern Bodies: Determinations of Self in Immune System Discourse’ 203
-
Section 4: After the Binary
- Introduction 217
- 4.1 ‘Bodies, Identities, Feminisms’ 220
- 4.2 ‘Power, Bodies and Difference’ 227
- 4.3 ‘Bodies that Matter’ 235
- 4.4 ‘Feminism, Foucault and the Politics of the Body’ 246
- 4.5 ‘Write Your Body’ and ‘The Body in Theory’ 258
- 4.6 ‘Psychoanalysis and the Body’ 267
-
Section 5: Alter/ed Bodies
- Introduction 275
- 5.1 ‘Forms of Technological Embodiment: Reading the Body in Contemporary Culture’ 278
- 5.2 ‘Signs of Wonder and Traces of Doubt: On Teratology and Embodied Differences’ 290
- 5.3 ‘Interview from Warrior Marks’ 302
- 5.4 ‘The Trials of the Black African Woman’ 309
- 5.5 ‘The Economy of Violence: Black Bodies and the Unspeakable Terror’ 311
- 5.6 ‘Feminism, Disability, and Transcendence of the Body’ 324
-
Section 6: BodySpaceMatter
- Introduction 337
- 6.1 ‘Her Body/Her Boundaries’ 341
- 6.2 ‘Women and Everyday Spaces’ 359
- 6.3 ‘Surviving Rape: A Morning/Mourning Ritual’ 371
- 6.4 ‘Bodies-Cities’ 381
- 6.5 ‘Mapping the Colonial Body: Sexual Economies and the State in Colonial India’ 388
- 6.6 ‘Woman, Nation and Narration in Midnight's Children' 399
-
Section 7: Performing the Body
- Introduction 413
- 7.1 ‘Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions’ 416
- 7.2 ‘The Guilty Pleasures of Female Theatrical Cross- Dressing’ 423
- 7.3 ‘Breaking the Boundaries of the Broken Body’ 432
- 7.4 ‘Feminine Charms and Outrageous Arms’ 445
- 7.5 ‘“My Body is my Art”: Cosmetic Surgery as Feminist Utopia?’ 454
- 7.6 ‘“Freud’s Fetishism” and the Lesbian Dildo Debates’ 466
- Copyright Acknowledgements 477
- Subject Index 481
- Name Index 485
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- Acknowledgements ix
- Openings on the Body: A Critical Introduction 1
-
Section 1: Woman as Body?
- Introduction 17
- 1.1 ‘Theories of Gender and Race’ 21
- 1.2 ‘Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary Views’ 32
- 1.3 ‘Bodies and Biology’ 42
- 1.4 ‘My Body, Myself: How Does a Black Woman Do Sociology?’ 50
- 1.5 ‘Our Bodies, Ourselves: Why We Should Add Old Fashioned Empirical Phenomenology to the New Theories of the Body’ 64
-
Section 2: Sexy Bodies
- Introduction 79
- 2.1 ‘When Our Lips Speak Together’ 82
- 2.2 ‘The Nose’ and ‘Taste’ 91
- 2.3 ‘Toward a Genealogy of Black Female Sexuality: The Problematic of Silence’ 93
- 2.4 ‘Body Matters: Cultural Inscriptions’ 105
- 2.5 ‘Lesbian Bodies: Tribades, Tomboys and Tarts’ 111
- 2.6 ‘F2M: The Making of Female Masculinity’ 125
- 2.7 ‘NO BODY is “Doing It”: Cybersexuality’ 134
- 2.8 ‘The Hot Rod Bodies of Cybersex’ 140
-
Section 3: Bodies in Science and Biomedicine
- Introduction 145
- 3.1 ‘A Burst of Light: Living with Cancer’ 149
- 3.2 ‘Breast Cancer: An Adventure in Applied Deconstruction’ 153
- 3.3. ‘Natural Facts: A Historical Perspective on Science and Sexuality’ 157
- 3.4 ‘Menopause: The Storm before the Calm’ 169
- 3.5 ‘The Egg and the Sperm: How Science has Constructed a Romance Based on Stereotypical Male-Female Roles’ 179
- 3.6 ‘Disciplining Mothers: Feminism and the New Reproductive Technologies’ 190
- 3.7 ‘The Biopolitics of Postmodern Bodies: Determinations of Self in Immune System Discourse’ 203
-
Section 4: After the Binary
- Introduction 217
- 4.1 ‘Bodies, Identities, Feminisms’ 220
- 4.2 ‘Power, Bodies and Difference’ 227
- 4.3 ‘Bodies that Matter’ 235
- 4.4 ‘Feminism, Foucault and the Politics of the Body’ 246
- 4.5 ‘Write Your Body’ and ‘The Body in Theory’ 258
- 4.6 ‘Psychoanalysis and the Body’ 267
-
Section 5: Alter/ed Bodies
- Introduction 275
- 5.1 ‘Forms of Technological Embodiment: Reading the Body in Contemporary Culture’ 278
- 5.2 ‘Signs of Wonder and Traces of Doubt: On Teratology and Embodied Differences’ 290
- 5.3 ‘Interview from Warrior Marks’ 302
- 5.4 ‘The Trials of the Black African Woman’ 309
- 5.5 ‘The Economy of Violence: Black Bodies and the Unspeakable Terror’ 311
- 5.6 ‘Feminism, Disability, and Transcendence of the Body’ 324
-
Section 6: BodySpaceMatter
- Introduction 337
- 6.1 ‘Her Body/Her Boundaries’ 341
- 6.2 ‘Women and Everyday Spaces’ 359
- 6.3 ‘Surviving Rape: A Morning/Mourning Ritual’ 371
- 6.4 ‘Bodies-Cities’ 381
- 6.5 ‘Mapping the Colonial Body: Sexual Economies and the State in Colonial India’ 388
- 6.6 ‘Woman, Nation and Narration in Midnight's Children' 399
-
Section 7: Performing the Body
- Introduction 413
- 7.1 ‘Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions’ 416
- 7.2 ‘The Guilty Pleasures of Female Theatrical Cross- Dressing’ 423
- 7.3 ‘Breaking the Boundaries of the Broken Body’ 432
- 7.4 ‘Feminine Charms and Outrageous Arms’ 445
- 7.5 ‘“My Body is my Art”: Cosmetic Surgery as Feminist Utopia?’ 454
- 7.6 ‘“Freud’s Fetishism” and the Lesbian Dildo Debates’ 466
- Copyright Acknowledgements 477
- Subject Index 481
- Name Index 485