Reading the social body /
Reading the social body /
edited by Catherine B. Burroughs & Jeffrey David Ehrenreich.
- Iowa City : University of Iowa Press, �1993.
- 1 online resource (viii, 273 pages) : illustrations
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Reading the social body / The social skin / The constructed body / Lesbians and the (re/de) construction of the female body / On the semiotics of torture: the case of the disappeared in Chile / "Who kills whores?" "I do," says Jack: race, gender, and body in Victorian London / Metaphorical representation of the female body in Edgar Degas's A cotton office in New Orleans / Drinking themselves to life, or the body in the bottle: filmic negotiations in the construction of the alcoholic female body / Unamuno: the body and the myth / Spirited bodies in Earl Lovelace's The wine of astonishment / Locke and Blake as physicians: delivering the eighteenth-century body / Inter-mediate stages: reconsidering the body in "closet drama" / Catherine B. Burroughs & Jeffrey David Ehrenreich -- Terence S. Turner -- Colette Guillaumin, translated by Diane Griffin Crowder -- Diane Griffin Crowder -- Renato Martinez -- Sander L. Gilman -- Dolores Mitchell -- Melinda Kanner -- Lynette Seator -- Renu Juneja -- Wayne Glausser -- Michael Evenden. Introduction:
Use copy
The overarching argument of Reading the Social Body is that the body is cultural rather than "natural." Some of the essays treat the social construction of bodies that have actually existed in human history; others discuss the representation of bodies in artistic contexts; all recognize that everything visible to the human body--from posture and costume to the width of an eyebrow or a smile--is determined by and shaped in response to a particular culture.
Electronic reproduction.
[Place of publication not identified] :
HathiTrust Digital Library,
2010.
Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.
http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212
1587290294 9781587290299
22573/ctt20gpn0j JSTOR
Human body--Social aspects.
Human body in literature.
Human body (Philosophy)
Feminist criticism.
HEALTH & FITNESS--Beauty & Grooming.
Feminist criticism.
Human body in literature.
Human body (Philosophy)
Human body--Social aspects.
Electronic books.
Electronic books.
GT495 / .R43 1993eb
391/.6
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Reading the social body / The social skin / The constructed body / Lesbians and the (re/de) construction of the female body / On the semiotics of torture: the case of the disappeared in Chile / "Who kills whores?" "I do," says Jack: race, gender, and body in Victorian London / Metaphorical representation of the female body in Edgar Degas's A cotton office in New Orleans / Drinking themselves to life, or the body in the bottle: filmic negotiations in the construction of the alcoholic female body / Unamuno: the body and the myth / Spirited bodies in Earl Lovelace's The wine of astonishment / Locke and Blake as physicians: delivering the eighteenth-century body / Inter-mediate stages: reconsidering the body in "closet drama" / Catherine B. Burroughs & Jeffrey David Ehrenreich -- Terence S. Turner -- Colette Guillaumin, translated by Diane Griffin Crowder -- Diane Griffin Crowder -- Renato Martinez -- Sander L. Gilman -- Dolores Mitchell -- Melinda Kanner -- Lynette Seator -- Renu Juneja -- Wayne Glausser -- Michael Evenden. Introduction:
Use copy
The overarching argument of Reading the Social Body is that the body is cultural rather than "natural." Some of the essays treat the social construction of bodies that have actually existed in human history; others discuss the representation of bodies in artistic contexts; all recognize that everything visible to the human body--from posture and costume to the width of an eyebrow or a smile--is determined by and shaped in response to a particular culture.
Electronic reproduction.
[Place of publication not identified] :
HathiTrust Digital Library,
2010.
Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.
http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212
1587290294 9781587290299
22573/ctt20gpn0j JSTOR
Human body--Social aspects.
Human body in literature.
Human body (Philosophy)
Feminist criticism.
HEALTH & FITNESS--Beauty & Grooming.
Feminist criticism.
Human body in literature.
Human body (Philosophy)
Human body--Social aspects.
Electronic books.
Electronic books.
GT495 / .R43 1993eb
391/.6