Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Autor/inn/en | Ramanathan, Vaidehi; Makoni, Sinfree |
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Titel | Bringing the Body Back: The (Mis)Languaging of Bodies in Bio-Medical, Societal and Poststructuralist Discourses on Diabetes and Epilepsy |
Quelle | In: Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 4 (2007) 4, S.283-306 (24 Seiten)Infoseite zur Zeitschrift
PDF als Volltext |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | gedruckt; online; Zeitschriftenaufsatz |
ISSN | 1542-7587 |
Schlagwörter | Epilepsy; Applied Linguistics; Diabetes; Disabilities; Biomedicine; Human Body; Males; Chronic Illness; Language Usage; Aging (Individuals); Humanism; Postmodernism; Social Attitudes; Self Concept; Clinical Diagnosis; Personal Narratives Epilepsie; Linguistics; Linguistik; Angewandte Linguistik; Handicap; Behinderung; Biomedizin; Menschlicher Körper; Male; Männliches Geschlecht; Chronic disease; Chronische Krankheit; Sprachgebrauch; Aging; Altern; Humanismus; Postmoderne; Social attidude; Soziale Einstellung; Selbstkonzept; Erlebniserzählung |
Abstract | Recent scholarship on "disabilities" and bodies has tended to be extreme in its orientation and has, on the whole, not been able to speak of chronic disabilities and bodily breakdown in humanistic ways. In its verve toward finding "cures," biomedical discourses, from which societal discourses draw their strength, have emphasized malfunctioning body parts and have made little room for bodily breakdown. Likewise, some strains of poststructuralist discourses on bodies in their tendency to emphasize the performative aspects of bodies and to see experience as constantly under erasure, make little room for bodily breakdowns. Based on an evolving exploration that includes various kinds of data, this paper focuses on how two men living with chronic ailments, namely "type-1" diabetes and epilepsy, respectively, language their bodies and "disabilities." The paper argues for the need for applied linguistics in general and aging-related work in particular to bring the body back to where we can speak of it humanistically, to language the body and its breakdowns in ways that eschew both the dehumanizing rhetoric of biomedical discourses and the erasure of experiences as per some poststructuralist thought. However, in keeping with other strains of poststructuralist thinking, we sought to un-fix some "disability" interpretations by attempting to render them fluid. The paper also reflects on the extent to which we were successful, and the implications of such attempts on texting disability-related papers. (Contains 1 footnote.) (As Provided). |
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Erfasst von | ERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC |
Update | 2017/4/10 |