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Presence in the Flesh Katharine Young

Presence in the Flesh By Katharine Young

Presence in the Flesh by Katharine Young


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Summary

Disembodiment--rendering the body an object and the self bodyless--is the foundational gesture of medicine. How, then, does medical practice acknowledge the presence of the person in the objectified body? Katharine Young considers in detail the "choreography" such a maneuver requires.

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Presence in the Flesh Summary

Presence in the Flesh: The Body in Medicine by Katharine Young

Any woman who has been examined by a gynecologist could tell Descartes a thing or two about the mind/body problem. Is her body an object? Is it the self? Is it both, and if so, how? Katharine Young takes up this problem in a book that looks at medicine's means of separating self and body--and at the body's ways of resisting. Disembodiment--rendering the body an object and the self bodyless--is the foundational gesture of medicine. How, then, does medical practice acknowledge the presence of the person in the objectified body? Young considers in detail the "choreography" such a maneuver requires--and the different turns it takes during a routine exam, or surgery, or even an autopsy. Distinctions between public and private, inside and outside, assume new meanings as medical practice proceeds from one venue to the next--waiting room to examining table, anteroom to operating theater, from the body's exterior to its internal organs. Young inspects the management of these and other "boundaries"--as a physician adds layers of clothing and a patient removes layers, as the rules of objective and subjective discourse shift, as notions of intimacy determine the etiquette of exchanges between doctor and patient. From embodied positions within the realm of medicine and disembodied positions outside it, Young richly conveys the complexity of presence in the flesh.

Presence in the Flesh Reviews

[Young] offer[s] up original insights...Young, whose Presence in the Flesh is a broad look at the entire medical profession (with special attention to the pelvic exam), began her research by spending three years trailing a gynecologist, a surgeon, a pathologist, and two internists at an unnamed university hospital. Wearing a tape recorder, she followed these doctors and their patients from the waiting room to the exam room and occasionally to the basement morgue. She noted, along the way, how the medical establishment urged people to disassociate themselves from their bodies so that 'doctoring' could take place...Of course, the most obvious forms of body banter are the 'kidney in Room 311' or 'heart in Room 312' that St. Elsewhere and ER have made famous. But Young goes beyond that, exploring the ways in which patients are complicit in this disembodiment. Village Voice [This] is an essential text, the work of uniquely curious scholarship that seeks to know the rules by investigating the exceptions or seeks to establish norms by a catalog of anomalies...Presence in the Flesh seeks to say something abut the mind-body problem, the question about where the self resides and what that ought to mean to us. -- Thomas Lynch Los Angeles Times This is a complex but timely book given the current pre-eminence of 'the body' in the social science literature. Young considers the ways in which medical practice acknowledges the presence of the person, in what to all intents and purposes, is the objectified body as perceived by medicine. Working from an anthropological perspective, but drawing on ethnography and phenomenology, Young also uses the ideas of Goffman...[This book] would be particularly useful to both health professionals and social scientists with an interest in embodiment. -- Ann Seed Journal of Advanced Nursing This fascinating look at an area of physician-patient interaction explores the contrasts that exist between the body as self and the body as object even in the situation of the postmortem examination...This work is complex and compelling. -- M.P. Tarbox Choice

About Katharine Young

Katharine Young, an independent scholar and writer, is Visiting Lecturer in Folklore at the University of California, Berkeley.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Preface: Presence, Fleshly and Otherwise Introduction: The Phenomenology of the Body in Medicine Disembodiment: Internal Medicine Perceptual Modalities: Gynecology Deciphering Signs: Surgery Still Life with Corpse: Pathology Conclusion: The Making of the Medical Body Coda: Perspectives on Embodiment Note on Transcription Notes References Index

Additional information

CIN067470181XG
9780674701816
067470181X
Presence in the Flesh: The Body in Medicine by Katharine Young
Used - Good
Hardback
Harvard University Press
1997-06-15
224
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Presence in the Flesh