"If the dying body makes us flinch and look away, struggling not to see what we have seen, the lost body disappears from cultural view, buried along with the sensory traces of its corporeal presence."--from the Introduction American popular culture conducts a passionate love affair with the healthy, fit, preferably beautiful body, and in recent years theories of embodiment have assumed importance in various scholarly disciplines. But what of the dying or dead body? Why do we avert our gaze, speak of it only as absence? This thoughtful and beautifully written book--illustrated with photographs by Shellburne Thurber and other remarkable images--finds a place for the dying and lost body in the material, intellectual, and imaginary spaces of contemporary American culture. Laura E. Tanner focuses her keen attention on photographs of AIDS patients and abandoned living spaces; newspaper accounts of September 11; literary works by Don DeLillo, Donald Hall, Sharon Olds, Marilynne Robinson, and others; and material objects, including the AIDS Quilt. She analyzes the way in which these representations of the body reflect current cultural assumptions, revealing how Americans read, imagine, and view the dynamics of illness and loss. The disavowal of bodily dimensions of death and grief, she asserts, deepens rather than mitigates the isolation of the dying and the bereaved. Lost Bodies will speak to anyone imperiled by the threat of loss.
This heartbreaking love story is also a searing tale of terrorism and political repression in North Africa.
In a desert prison camp a man is rotting, half-alive, at the bottom of a well. Andr�s has been there, held in horrific conditions, for many years. Around him other...
A collection of ten poems Césaire published in 1949, in an edition including thirty-two etchings by Picasso.
And yet, despite this escalating Orwellian practice by which the government and corporations visually locate and define bodies so as to regulate (and perhaps punish) them, some bodies are conspicuously missing in action. Not all bodies ...
Lost Bodies: Poems Between Portugal and Home
"This publication documents the exhibition Brendan Fernandes: Lost Bodies presented at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre, Queen's University, Canada and explores facets of Fernandes' contemporary art, performance and choreographic practice ...
He has published many stories, articles and essays in small magazines and literary anthologies. This is his first novel.
"The Lost Souls and their Bodies" satirically explores the socio-political settings of the Northern, Southern, Eastern and Western lands from which main characters originate only to be united on a Northern island.
Lost Bodies and Wild Imaginations [microform]: Expressing the Forbidden Tales of Childhood Sexual Abuse Through Artful Inquiry
Over 2,000 people went missing in Cyprus between 1963 & 1974. This work examines how both communities face the need to mourn without a body, nor even any certain knowledge of what has happened to their loved ones.