Consuming Bodies: Body Commodification and Embodiment in Late Capitalist Societies
Editat de Jackie Hogan, Sarah Whetstoneen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 dec 2024
Consuming Bodies: Body Commodification and Embodiment in Late Capitalist Societies explores the ways our bodies are increasingly commodified, from before birth to after death, through both long-standing forms of commodification (captive labor, sex work, and spectator sports) and newer forms (commercial surrogacy, the thriving trade in human biomaterials, female genital “rejuvenation” surgery, global romance tourism, and green burial practices, among others). As this diverse range of topics demonstrates, body commodification reaches increasingly into every realm of our lives, from our most intimate experiences to encounters with pop culture, the “beauty” industries, the medical-industrial complex, and the state.
This volume takes a critical perspective on body commodification and embodiment both in the US and across the globe, making an important contribution to social scientific understandings of the body, both by going beyond the Eurocentric approach that typifies much of the extant scholarly literature, and by addressing newly emerging practices that are growing out of techno-scientific and social changes.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032352343
ISBN-10: 1032352345
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 18
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032352345
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 18
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Academic, Postgraduate, Professional, and Undergraduate AdvancedCuprins
Contributors
Part I Introduction
1. Introduction
Sarah Whetstone and Jackie Hogan
2. Thinking Bodies: A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Bodies and Embodiment
Jackie Hogan
Part II Bodies and the Commodification of Sex, Love and Desire
3. Consuming Racialized Labor: Sex Tourists, Romance Tourists and Retirement Migrants in the Philippines
Julia Meszaros and Maria Cecilia Hwang
4. “Blackfishing”: Hypersexualization, Racial Parody, and the Fetishization of the Black Femme Body
Maxine K. Wright
5. “Love Addiction” and the Paradox of “Healthy” Love
Tayler Nelson
6. Craving Bigger Bodies: Size, Sexuality, and Becoming Larger
Tony E. Adams
Part III Pleasure, Play and Authenticity in Bodily Expressions
7. Sensory Authenticity: Embodying and Commodifying “the Other”
Nicholas Bascuñan-Wiley
8. Pretty, Powerful, and Playful: Self-commodification and “Postfeminist Sensibility” among Women Action Sports Athletes
Charli Kerns
9. Paying to Perform: Self-commodification and Stigma Management Strategies in Contemporary Burlesque
Nicole B. Oehmen and Kathryn Rittenhour
10. Spinning the Poles: Social Location and Embodied Resistance in Recreational Pole Dancing
Sarah Whetstone
Part IV Disciplining Bodies: Commodification and Social Control
11. Economies of Violence: Pay-to-Stay and the Value of Incarcerated Bodies
Brittany Friedman, April D. Fernandes and Gabriela M. Kirk-Werner
12. The Urbanormative Discipline of Rural Bodies and the Construction of Rural Delinquency
Jimmy Robinson and Margaux Crider Robinson
13. From “Adopt a Clitoris” to “Designer Vaginas:” Critical Reflections on Genital Surgeries and the Commodification of Female Genitalia
Fae Chubin
Part V Bio-commodification, Bio-ethics, and Biomedical Marketplaces
14. Risky Bodies: BRCA Testing, Previvors, and the Reification of Risk
Jackie Hogan
15. Neoliberal Eugenics in the Egg and Sperm Donation Marketplace
Mia Rosario Milne
16. Organ Transplantation, Surrogacy, and the “Gift” Masquerade
Sanchita Sarkar
17. Corpses, Clients, and Commodification in the Natural Burial Marketplace
Doug Valentine
Index
Part I Introduction
1. Introduction
Sarah Whetstone and Jackie Hogan
2. Thinking Bodies: A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Bodies and Embodiment
Jackie Hogan
Part II Bodies and the Commodification of Sex, Love and Desire
3. Consuming Racialized Labor: Sex Tourists, Romance Tourists and Retirement Migrants in the Philippines
Julia Meszaros and Maria Cecilia Hwang
4. “Blackfishing”: Hypersexualization, Racial Parody, and the Fetishization of the Black Femme Body
Maxine K. Wright
5. “Love Addiction” and the Paradox of “Healthy” Love
Tayler Nelson
6. Craving Bigger Bodies: Size, Sexuality, and Becoming Larger
Tony E. Adams
Part III Pleasure, Play and Authenticity in Bodily Expressions
7. Sensory Authenticity: Embodying and Commodifying “the Other”
Nicholas Bascuñan-Wiley
8. Pretty, Powerful, and Playful: Self-commodification and “Postfeminist Sensibility” among Women Action Sports Athletes
Charli Kerns
9. Paying to Perform: Self-commodification and Stigma Management Strategies in Contemporary Burlesque
Nicole B. Oehmen and Kathryn Rittenhour
10. Spinning the Poles: Social Location and Embodied Resistance in Recreational Pole Dancing
Sarah Whetstone
Part IV Disciplining Bodies: Commodification and Social Control
11. Economies of Violence: Pay-to-Stay and the Value of Incarcerated Bodies
Brittany Friedman, April D. Fernandes and Gabriela M. Kirk-Werner
12. The Urbanormative Discipline of Rural Bodies and the Construction of Rural Delinquency
Jimmy Robinson and Margaux Crider Robinson
13. From “Adopt a Clitoris” to “Designer Vaginas:” Critical Reflections on Genital Surgeries and the Commodification of Female Genitalia
Fae Chubin
Part V Bio-commodification, Bio-ethics, and Biomedical Marketplaces
14. Risky Bodies: BRCA Testing, Previvors, and the Reification of Risk
Jackie Hogan
15. Neoliberal Eugenics in the Egg and Sperm Donation Marketplace
Mia Rosario Milne
16. Organ Transplantation, Surrogacy, and the “Gift” Masquerade
Sanchita Sarkar
17. Corpses, Clients, and Commodification in the Natural Burial Marketplace
Doug Valentine
Index
Notă biografică
Jackie Hogan is Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois (USA). She has authored three books, including Gender, Race and National Identity: Nations of Flesh and Blood; Lincoln, Inc.: Selling the Sixteenth President in Contemporary America; and Roots Quest: Inside America’s Genealogy Boom.
Sarah Whetstone is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois (USA). Her past research focused on social inequalities in American addiction treatment, punishment, stigma, and suffering in the carceral state. Her new projects explore gender, sport, creative resistance and embodiment.
Sarah Whetstone is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois (USA). Her past research focused on social inequalities in American addiction treatment, punishment, stigma, and suffering in the carceral state. Her new projects explore gender, sport, creative resistance and embodiment.
Recenzii
This collection, Consuming Bodies, offers a diverse, comprehensive and incisive analysis of the conditions shaping embodiment amidst capitalist processes of commodification. Covering themes across the life-course, from reproductive technologies, the biomaterials trade, cosmetic surgery, and to the natural burial marketplace, chapters provide an impressive range of topics. Authors are at the cutting edge of scholarship and demonstrate the body's significance for understanding the contemporary conditions of our social and cultural worlds. A must-read for students and scholars of health, gender and race, power, and the embodied dynamics of inequalities.
Julia Coffey, Associate Professor of the School of Humanities at the University of Newcastle Australia, author of Everyday Embodiment: Rethinking Youth Body Image (2021)
Julia Coffey, Associate Professor of the School of Humanities at the University of Newcastle Australia, author of Everyday Embodiment: Rethinking Youth Body Image (2021)
Descriere
Consuming Bodies takes a critical perspective on body commodification both in the US and across the globe, addressing newly emerging practices and making an important contribution to social scientific understandings of the body that goes beyond the Eurocentrism of the extant scholarly literature.