Bibliographie complète
"Why Should Our Bodies End at the Skin?": Embodiment, Boundaries, and Somatechnics
Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
- SHILDRICK, MARGRIT (Auteur)
Titre
"Why Should Our Bodies End at the Skin?": Embodiment, Boundaries, and Somatechnics
Résumé
Donna Haraway's enduring question—"Why should our bodies end at the skin?" (Haraway 1990, 220)—is ever more relevant in the postmodern era, where issues of bodies, boundaries, and technologies increasingly challenge not only the normative performance of the human subject, but also the very understanding of what counts as human. Critical Disability Studies has taken up the problematic of technology, particularly in relation to the deployment of prostheses by people with disabilities. Yet rehabilitation to normative practice or appearance is no longer the point; instead, the lived experience of disability generates its own specific possibilities that both limit and extend the performativity of the embodied self. I look at what is at stake in the challenge to the Western logos that comes specifically from the capacities of the disabled body, understood not as a less than perfect form of the normative, but as figuring difference in a nonbinary sense. Feminist theory has long contested the isomorphism of the logos, but I go beyond simply setting out the grounds for revaluing multiple variant forms. The feminist turn to Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze opens up the problematic to a celebratory positioning of difference and transcorporeality as the very conditions of life.
Publication
Hypatia
Volume
30
Numéro
1
Pages
13-29
Date
2015
Langue
Anglais
Titre abrégé
"Why Should Our Bodies End at the Skin?
Catalogue de bibl.
WorldCat Discovery Service
Référence
SHILDRICK, MARGRIT. (2015). « Why Should Our Bodies End at the Skin? »: Embodiment, Boundaries, and Somatechnics. Hypatia, 30(1), 13‑29. https://uqam-bib.on.worldcat.org/oclc/9970005226
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