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The Absent Body Project: Cosmetic Surgery as a Response to Bodily Dys-appearanceUniversity of Aberdeen Sociologists have conceptualized the body as a project that is worked on and transformed as a central part of self-identity (Shilling, 2003). In contrast, Leders (1990) notion of the absent body focuses on the bodys tendency to remain in the corporeal background unless specific physiological or social experiences cause it to dys-appear, or emerge problematically into direct consciousness.This article draws upon data from interviews with women who have had cosmetic surgery to show that these seemingly contradictory approaches to the body and self-identity are not reconcilable. Specifically, the data presented suggest that while cosmetic surgery provides a resource for bringing the body into line with an existing sense of self, it is also used to alleviate the bodys dys-appearances. Thus, this article describes how elements of both the absent body and body project perspectives are relevant to cosmetic surgery patients experiences of embodiment.
Key Words: absent body body modification body project cosmetic surgery self-identity
Sociology, Vol. 40, No. 4,
699-716 (2006) |
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