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Dubious Equalities and Embodied Differences

Cultural Studies on Cosmetic Surgery

Dubious Equalities and Embodied Differences cover

Dubious Equalities and Embodied Differences

Cultural Studies on Cosmetic Surgery

Description

Dubious Equalities and Embodied Differences explores cosmetic surgery as a cultural phenomenon of late modernity. From its onset as a medical specialty at the end of the nineteenth century, cosmetic surgery has been intimately liked to discourses of 'normalcy,' as well as to gender, race, and other categories of difference that have shaped its technologies and techniques, its professional ideologies, and the objects of its interventions. Davis considers how cosmetic surgery is taken up in representations of cosmetic surgery in medical discourse and in popular culture, drawing on a wide range of cultural manifestations including televised 'infotainment,' popular music, performance art, surgeon biographies, stories of patients, public debates, and medical texts. Davis critically engages with the notion of cosmetic surgery as a neutral technology and shows how it is implicated in the surgical erasure of embodied difference.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Cosmetic Surgery in a Different Voice
Chapter 3 Lonely Heroes and Great White Gods
Chapter 4 The Rhetoric of Cosmetic Surgery
Chapter 5 Surgical Stories
Chapter 6 Surgical Passing
Chapter 7 "My Body is My Art"
Chapter 8 "A Dubious Equality"

Product details

Published 01 Oct 2003
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 176
ISBN 9780585455051
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Series Explorations in Bioethics and the Medical Humanities
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

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