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
Katharine Young is a skillful pathologist of medicine and its primary object, the Body Clinical. Wedding the 'eagle's eye' of the surgeon to the keen ear of the ethnographer who is also a fine story teller, Young probes, slices, dissects, and holds up to the light the sometimes carnivalesque, sometimes grotesque 'bodies' produced in the many strange encounters of a medical kind. This book forces us to consider the weight of real bodies, i.e. bodies that 'matter,' the medical anthropologist's revence on the aestheticized, abstract, postmodern 'bodies' of cultural studies. Bravo, and at last! -- Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of California, Berkeley This original and finely textured book provides fascinating insight into constructions of 'the body' (and the persons associated with bodies) in medical encounters. Its chief contribution is to show how the fact of human embodiment requires a constant, artful negotiation of interaction so as to accommodate the varying ways in which a consciousness of bodies can recede from or impinge on ongoing activities. In the medical sphere in particular, Katharine Young shows how physicians and patients rely on convention to construct multiple versions of both body and self of the patient, as these are needed in the conduct of an examination or a surgical procedure. This study emphasizes how the medical encounter unfolds as a joint production, with patients usually collaborating in their own objectification. -- Marjorie DeVault, Syracuse University The richness and detail of its vision and the utility of its analytical framework will make Presence in the Flesh helpful to modernists and historians alike. -- Katharine Park, Wellesley College
Katharine Young, an independent scholar and writer, is Visiting Lecturer in Folklore at the University of California, Berkeley.
[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.
*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.
*Journal of Advanced Nursing*
Katharine Young is a skillful pathologist of medicine and its
primary object, the Body Clinical. Wedding the 'eagle's eye' of the
surgeon to the keen ear of the ethnographer who is also a fine
story teller, Young probes, slices, dissects, and holds up to the
light the sometimes carnivalesque, sometimes grotesque 'bodies'
produced in the many strange encounters of a medical kind. This
book forces us to consider the weight of real bodies, i.e. bodies
that 'matter,' the medical anthropologist's revence on the
aestheticized, abstract, postmodern 'bodies' of cultural studies.
Bravo, and at last!
*Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of California, Berkeley*
This original and finely textured book provides fascinating insight
into constructions of 'the body' (and the persons associated with
bodies) in medical encounters. Its chief contribution is to show
how the fact of human embodiment requires a constant, artful
negotiation of interaction so as to accommodate the varying ways in
which a consciousness of bodies can recede from or impinge on
ongoing activities. In the medical sphere in particular, Katharine
Young shows how physicians and patients rely on convention to
construct multiple versions of both body and self of the patient,
as these are needed in the conduct of an examination or a surgical
procedure. This study emphasizes how the medical encounter unfolds
as a joint production, with patients usually collaborating in their
own objectification.
*Marjorie DeVault, Syracuse University*
The richness and detail of its vision and the utility of its
analytical framework will make Presence in the Flesh helpful to
modernists and historians alike.
*Katharine Park, Wellesley College*
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.
*Choice*
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