Title of article :
Modern medicine and the “uncertain body”: From corporeality to hyperreality?
Author/Authors :
Simon J. Williams، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Abstract :
This paper (re)considers the role of medical technology at three interrelated levels: first, the extent to which medical technology renders our bodies increasingly “uncertain” at the turn of the century; second, the analytical purchase which the notion of the (medical) cyborg provides regarding contemporary forms of human embodiment; and finally, at a broader level, the issues this raises in relation to a (late) modernist or postmodernist reading of contemporary medical practice. Key themes here include the plastic body, the bionic body, communal/interchangeable bodies, (genetically) engineered/chosen bodies, and virtual bodies. The paper concludes with a critical appraisal of these themes and issues, arguing for a late modernist position on medical technology as both a positive and negative rationalising force, and a “life political agenda” in which the “all-too-human” quality of human nature is seen as inviolable.
Keywords :
technology , Plastic surgery , Cyborg , genetics , Virtual Reality , postmodernism , Body , (late) modernity , medicine
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine
Journal title :
Social Science and Medicine