Surface tensions [electronic resource] : surgery, bodily boundaries, and the social self / Lenore Manderson.

By: Manderson, LenoreContributor(s): ProQuest (Firm)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Walnut Creek, Calif. : Left Coast Press, 2011Description: 294 pISBN: 9781611320992 (electronic bk.)Subject(s): Human body -- Social aspects | Body image | People with disabilities -- Psychology | Medical anthropologyGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 305.9/08 LOC classification: HM636 | .M33 2011Online resources: Click to View Summary: "Surface Tensions is an expansive, yet intimate study of how people remake themselves after catastrophic bodily change--the loss of limbs, the loss of function, the loss or replacement of organs. Against a sweeping cultural backdrop of art, popular culture, and the history of science and medicine, Manderson uses narrative epistemology based on in-depth interviews with over 300 individuals to show how they re-establish the coherence of their bodies, identities, and biographies. In addition to offering important new insights into the care, rehabilitation, and rehabituation of post-trauma patients, Manderson's work challenges conventional ideas about the nature of embodiment and is an important contribution to medical anthropology, disability studies, and cultural studies"-- Provided by publisher.
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"Surface Tensions is an expansive, yet intimate study of how people remake themselves after catastrophic bodily change--the loss of limbs, the loss of function, the loss or replacement of organs. Against a sweeping cultural backdrop of art, popular culture, and the history of science and medicine, Manderson uses narrative epistemology based on in-depth interviews with over 300 individuals to show how they re-establish the coherence of their bodies, identities, and biographies. In addition to offering important new insights into the care, rehabilitation, and rehabituation of post-trauma patients, Manderson's work challenges conventional ideas about the nature of embodiment and is an important contribution to medical anthropology, disability studies, and cultural studies"-- Provided by publisher.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, MI : ProQuest, 2015. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest affiliated libraries.

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