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Body Modification

Body Modification. Frances Sand. Stalking Cat (Dennis Avner) www.stalkingcat.net. www.thelizardman.com (Erik Sprague). www.lizardman.com. Outline. What is body modification? Modern Primitivism (and its critiques)

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Body Modification

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  1. Body Modification

  2. Frances Sand

  3. Stalking Cat (Dennis Avner)www.stalkingcat.net

  4. www.thelizardman.com(Erik Sprague)

  5. www.lizardman.com

  6. Outline • What is body modification? • Modern Primitivism (and its critiques) • Body modification and gender (radical feminist critiques and body modifiers’ responses) • Body modification and consumer culture

  7. What is body modification? • “a long list of practices which include piercing, tattooing, branding, cutting, binding and inserting implants to alter the appearance and form of the body.” (Featherstone 2000: 1) • Also, the use of prosthetics / technical systems (see week 15) • Often articulated in terms of “a gesture against the body natural and the tyranny of habitus formation” (Featherstone 2000)

  8. Recurrent themes (Pitts 2003) • Body play • To promote technological / anthropological knowledge of bodies • To cultivate provocative bodily performance • To articulate the body’s symbolic significance • Bodily self-ownership • Personal, cultural and political expression through the body • New possibilities for gender / sexuality / ethnic identity

  9. Modern Primitivism • Coined by Fakir Musafar • Engaging in body modification practices / rituals that make reference to traditional practices in “primitive cultures” • Lexicon of vision quests / spirits / spirit guides / totems etc. • Emphasis on the body, community, sexuality and spirituality • (Sweetman 2000) identity strategy within the late modern condition • Not just individual, but collective creativity

  10. Critiques… • Extends notion of self-invention in post-modern culture to ethnic identity – “the myth of non-locatedness” (Pitts 2003: 148) • Legacy of colonialism

  11. Critiques • Extends notion of self-invention in post-modern culture to ethnic identity – “the myth of non-locatedness” (Pitts 2003: 148) • Legacy of colonialism • Extends notion of self-invention in post-modern culture to ethnic identity – “the myth of non-locatedness” (Pitts 2003: 148) • Legacy of colonialism

  12. Body modification and gender • Radical feminist opposition (see Jeffreys 2000): • “the cottage industry of self-mutilation” • “self-mutilation by proxy” • continuum of harm against women • “Such practices of self-mutilation need to be included in our understanding of those harmful western cultural practices that tend to be excused under the rubrics of “choice, “fashion” or “beauty”, such as cosmetic surgery, transsexual surgery, dieting and high heel shoes” (p. 410) • Produce of abuse; extension of abuse.

  13. Body modifiers’ responses • “Far from revealing women’s self-hatred and lack of self-control, they argue, the practices demonstrate women’s assertion of control over their own bodies.” (Pitts 2003: 56) • Reclaiming the body; being in control • Making a public statement • Being different • Challenging expertise

  14. But… • Radical feminists presume a pristine body, but it is also problematic to assume that body projects mean that an individual can limitlessly negotiate bodies and identities: (Pitts) they are negotiating relationship between identity, culture and their own bodies • Limits of subversive body politics – increasing Othering / affirming values they are resisting? • Eventually, the body modification has to stop • Limiting (as well as limited) • Can’t always ensure a politically radical message

  15. Body modification as consumer culture? (Turner 2000) • “Body marks are typically narcissistic, being playful signs to the self. They are part of a personal and interior biography, not an obligatory feature of collective memory.” (Turner 2000: 42) • Modern Primitivism is “simulated and ironic”. • Typology • Thick / thin solidarity • Hot / cool loyalties • Traditional tribalism is thick / hot; contemporary tattooing (and Modern Primitivism) is thin / cool.

  16. Body modification as consumer culture? (Sweetman 2000) • Hard to categorise tattooing / piercing / branding as “fashion” • Tattooing / piercing can be seen as “attempts to anchor or stabilise one’s sense of self identity, in part through the establishment of a coherent personal narrative” • Permanence • Pain • Planning • A sense of achievement – a “corporeal artefact”

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