Five Bodies: Re-figuring RelationshipsFive Bodies offers an introduction to some of the most urgent contemporary concerns within the sociology of the body. The book was first published in 1985 in the USA by Cornell University Press, and was nominated for the John Porter Award (sponsored by the Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association). A path breaking book, it offered a framework for the growing field of the sociology of the body and opened up 'the body' for sociological research. This new edition (the previous edition was published by Cornell University Press (1985) has been substantially revised and updated to address today's issues of the body in modern life, community and politics. John O'Neill examines how embodied selves and relationships are being re-shaped and re-figured and how the embodied figures of the polity, economy and society represent the contested notions of identity, desire, wholeness and fragmentation. He focuses upon those cultural practices through which we map our macro-micro worlds: · articulating a cosmology · a body politic · a productivensumptive economy · a bio-technological frontier of human design and transplantation |
From inside the book
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... conception of man as creator . Indeed , this latter conception itself , as manifested in the idea of God , amounts to nothing less than an objec- tification of a creative urge that is no longer satisfied with self - reproduction , but ...
... conception of the body politic for which I shall argue differs from the rhetoric of the administrative and ... conceptions of society seem utopian and irrational . However , the repressive functions of administrative rationality have ...
... conception , birth , nurturing , sexual conduct , illness , pain , aging , dying - into the administration of bureaucratized centers of professional care which weaken familized care even though it remains a residual necessity . However ...