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ANTHROPOLOGIES OF THE BODY

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Title: ANTHROPOLOGIES OF THE BODY Author: U of L Last modified by: U of L Created Date: 11/22/2006 4:54:10 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ANTHROPOLOGIES OF THE BODY


1
ANTHROPOLOGIES OF THE BODY
  • Scheper-Hughes Lock the mindful body
  • Phenomenology embodiment
  • Bourdieu Structure, habitus, practice

2
Scheper-Hughes Lock anthropology of the body
  • The body as simultaneously a physical and
    symbolic artifact, naturally and culturally
    produced, anchored in a particular historical
    moment
  • Four bodies individual body, social body, and
    body politic, the mindful body
  • separate but overlapping units of analysis
  • different theoretical approaches
  • phenomenology, structuralism and symbolism,
    post-structuralism (practice theory structure
    agency)

3
The Individual Body
  • lived experience of the body-self, body, mind,
    matter, psyche, soul

4
The Social Body
  • representational uses of the body as a natural
    symbol with which to think about nature, society,
    culture

5
The Body Politic
  • regulation, surveillance, control of bodies
    (individual collective) in reproduction
    sexuality, in work leisure, in sickness other
    forms of deviance

6
The Mindful Body
  • the most immediate, the proximate terrain where
    social truths and social contradictions are
    played out
  • a locus of personal and social resistance,
    creativity, and struggle
  • emotions form the mediatrix between the
    individual, social and political body, unified
    through the concept of the 'mindful body.'

7
PHENOMENOLOGY EMBODIMENT
  • Body is not an object to be studied in relation
    to culture, but is to be considered as the
    SUBJECT of culture
  • body is a setting in relation to the world
    consciousness is the body projecting itself into
    the world
  • Experience not a primordial existential given but
    a historically and culturally constitutes process
    predicated on certain ways of being in the world

8
STRUCTURE, HABITUS, PRACTICE (agency)
  • Structure a particular class of conditions of
    existence produce habitus
  • Habitus regulated and regular without being in
    any way the product of obedience to rules
  • habitus can be collectively orchestrated without
    being the product of the organizing action of a
    conductor
  • Social agents operate according to their "feel
    for the game" (the "feel" being, roughly,
    habitus, and the "game" being the structure).

9
STRUCTURE, HABITUS, PRACTICE (agency)
  • Practical sense (practice) -- proleptic
    adjustment (anticipatory) to demands of a field
    (structure)
  • encounter between habitus and a field which makes
    possible the near-perfect anticipation of the
    future inscribed in all the concrete
    configurations (structure)
  • the experience -- objective structures -- played
    out as the feel for direction, orientation,
    impending outcome

10
Gender the individual body, the social body,
the body politic, and habitus
  • Sex, sexuality, gender
  • Not the same thing

11
Sex the individual body
  • differences in biology
  • Is this a man or woman?
  • How do you know?

12
Sex the Social Body
  • Tells us part of the story, but not all of the
    story

13
Gender
14
Gender
  • GENDER - the cultural construction of male
    female characteristics
  • vs. the biological nature of men women
  • SEX differences are biological - GENDER
    differences are cultural
  • behavioral attitudinal differences from social
    cultural rather than biological point of view
  • Gender refers to the ways members of the two
    sexes are perceived, evaluated and expected to
    behave

15
Gender Boundaries
  • since gender is culturally constructed the
    boundaries are conceptual rather than physical
  • Boundaries require markers to indicate gender
  • the boundaries are dynamic, eg. now it is
    acceptable for men to wear earrings

16
Boundary Markers
  • Voice
  • Physique
  • Dress
  • Behaviour
  • Hair style
  • Kinetics
  • Language use

17
Boundary Markers Inter-personal Interaction
  • How do we react when someone seems to have traits
    of each category?
  • social intercourse requires that the interacting
    parties know to which gender category the other'
    belongs

Felicita Vestvali1824 - 1880
New York opera star who specialized in singing
contralto "trouser roles."
18
Women cross dress all the time. The difference
is perception. Acceptance or Rejection by society
19
Blurring the Boundaries
  • persistence of dualisms in ideologies of gender
  • other categories - every society including our
    own is at some time or other faced with people
    who do not fit into its sex gender categories

20
Third Gender
  • a significant number of people are born with
    genitalia that is neither clearly male or female
  • Hermaphrodites
  • persons who change their biological sex
  • persons who exhibit behavior deemed appropriate
    for the opposite sex
  • persons who take on other gender roles other than
    those indicated by their genitals

21
Third Gender
  • multiple cultural historical worlds in which
    people of divergent gender sexual desire exist
  • margins or borders of society
  • may pass as normal to remain hidden in the
    official ideology everyday commerce of social
    life
  • In some societies when discovered - iconic matter
    out of place - "monsters of the cultural
    imagination
  • third gender as sexual deviance a common theme in
    N. America

22
Is it possible to have a genderless society?
23
Sexuality the body politic
  • all societies regulate sexuality
  • lots of variation cross-culturally
  • degree of restrictiveness not always consistent
    through life span
  • adolescence vs. adulthood
  • Varieties of normative sexual orientation
  • Heterosexual, homosexual, transexual
  • Sexuality in societies change over time

24
Sexuality as body politics
  • sex acts have varying social significance and
    subjective meanings in accordance with the
    cultural context in which they occur
  • as evidenced by cross-cultural variation in sex
    categories and labels
  • the underlying assumption -- sexuality is
    mediated by cultural and historical factors
  • distinctions to be made between sexual acts,
    sexual identities, and sexual communities.

25
GENDER POWER
  • gender roles - tasks activities that a culture
    assigns to sexes
  • gender stereotypes - oversimplified strongly held
    ideas about the characteristics of men women
    third sex-third gender
  • gender stratification - unequal distribution of
    rewards (socially valued resources, power,
    prestige, personal freedom) between men women
    reflecting their position in the social hierarchy

26
Gender the Social Order
27
Social Stratification Gender
  • Gender is an important dimension of social
    inequality
  • Gender stratification frequently takes the form
    of patriarchy whereby men dominate women
  • Do women in our society have a second class
    status relative to men? If so How?

28
universals versus particulars
  • universal subordination of women is often cited
    as one of the true cross-cultural universals, a
    pan-cultural fact
  • Engels called it the world historical defeat of
    women
  • even so the particulars of womens roles,
    statuses, power, and value differ tremendously by
    culture

29
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30
The Poetics Politics of Bodies
  • Body image as text/representation
  • The poetics of the text/representation
  • identify aesthetic elements, narrative
    structures, epistemology
  • The politics of text/representation
  • Behavior (structure) controls perception
  • the body image experienced in perception
    approximates that anticipated by the cognized
    behaving self.
  • the use of the body-as-symbol and the distortion
    of the body image for communicative purposes
  • Images of our bodies is a basic component of our
    concept of our self and our personal identity.

31
Some Observations of Bodies in N. America
  • media's increasing use of slim female models and
    images of nearly unattainable body measurements
  • young women are subjected to images of the
    perfect female body and are subsequently
    distorting their own body images
  • Complaints about body fat have become normal
    discourse among females
  • This pattern of body image distortion is
    considerably more pronounced and more common in
    women than in men, to the point that it is
    considered a characteristically female phenomenon
    (1999).
  • new field of social aesthetics

32
Western Male Bodies Taiwanese Male Bodies
  • Body image disorders appear to be more prevalent
    in Western than non-Western men
  • Previous studies have shown that young Western
    men display unrealistic body ideals and that
    Western advertising seems to place an increasing
    value on the male body
  • Do Taiwanese men exhibit less dissatisfaction
    with their bodies than Western men?
  • Does Taiwanese advertising place less value on
    the male body than Western media?
  • Am J Psychiatry 162263-269, February 2005

33
Men Poetics/Politics of Male Bodies
advertising self
  • Taiwanese men exhibited significantly less body
    dissatisfaction than their Western counterparts.
  • In the magazine study, American magazine
    advertisements portrayed undressed Western men
    frequently, but Taiwanese magazines portrayed
    undressed Asian men rarely

34
Conclusions
  • Taiwan appears less preoccupied with male body
    image than Western societies.
  • This difference may reflect
  • Western traditions emphasizing muscularity and
    fitness as a measure of masculinity
  • increasing exposure of Western men to muscular
    male bodies in media images
  • greater decline in traditional male roles in the
    West, leading to greater emphasis on the body as
    a measure of masculinity
  • These factors may explain why body dysmorphic
    disorder and anabolic steroid abuse are more
    serious problems in the West than in Taiwan.

35
Discourse, Subjectivity, Power
  • Discourses
  • a system of representation
  • Codes and conventions
  • rules and practices that produce meaningful
    statements and regulate discourse in different
    historical periods
  • "Discourse, Foucault argues, constructs the
    topic.  It defines and produces the objects of
    our knowledge.  It governs the way that a topic
    can be meaningfully talked about and reasoned
    about.

36
Concepts of the Individual, self, person in
anthropology
  • Individual as member of humankinde (biologistic)
  • Self as locus of experience (psychologistic)
  • Person as agent-in-society (sociologistic)

37
Identity and Subjectivity
  • Social order -- arrays of identifications
    jockeying for position, gaining and losing
    strength, clashing with others, aligning with
    still others, and defining the texture of social
    action in their activity.
  • Subjectivity complex negotiation of
    representation experience
  • constructing the subject, constructing agency,
    constituting subjectivity

38
Discourse, Subjectivity, Power
  • Discourse -- the bearer of various subject
    positions
  • Subject positions -- specific positions of agency
    and identity in relation to particular forms of
    knowledge and practice
  • Subjectivity --produced within discourse,
    subjected to discourse.
  • subject position--for us to become the subject
    of a particular discourse,  and thus the bearers
    of its power/knowledge we must locate ourselves
    in the position from which the discourse makes
    most sense, and thus become its 'subjects' by
    subjecting' ourselves to its meanings, power and
    regulation.

39
Discourse, Gender, Power
  • sexuality and the body -- sites of power and
    politics
  • socially imposed structures that objectified
    sexual identity and gender differences
  • socially imposed structures that shape gender
    relations and behavior
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