Metamorphoses of the Body

Front Cover
U of Minnesota Press, 1998 - Social Science - 333 pages
Explores the relationship between power and the body.

This investigation of power and the body is a brilliantly original account of the nature of force as it functions in religious rituals, sorcery, political relations, and other social domains. Laying the foundation for an "anthropology of forces", it is crucial reading for anyone interested in how bodies and power circulate in a range of human contexts and cultures.

For Jose Gil the body, with its capacity to translate forces into signs, is the source of power. Analyzing the language of mime and gestures, comparing magical cures to psychiatric ones, contrasting the flayed body of Kafka's "In the Penal Colony" with the anatomical body in Vesalius's De Humani Corporis Fabrica, he develops a typology of metamorphoses of the body as they correspond to systems of signs.

A major intervention that marks the first appearance of Gil's work in English, Metamorphoses of the Body gives us an entirely new way of looking at relationships between bodies, forces, politics, and people.

 

Contents

Third Antinomy on the Ends of Power 41
1
Fourth Antinomy on the Limits of Power 57
7
The Floating Signifier 93
10
The Body Transducer of Signs 107
7
The Body and the Traditional Community 153
3
Dance and the Laughter of Bodies 165
5
Seriousness of Symbols and Incarnation 175
5
The Body and the Voice 187
Note on the Frontispiece of De Humani Corporis Fabrica
7
The Body and the Origin of the State 227
5
Conditions Under Which Societies without States
The Origin of the State 261
1
Conflict exchanges and debtThe judiciary processJustice and State law
The Surplus Value of the Power of the State 305
5
Notes 313
3
Index 331

The Body in Penal Settlements 197
7

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