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Body & Society
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‘Making Blood Flow’: Materializing Blood in Body Modification and Blood-borne Virus Prevention

Suzanne Fraser

Kylie Valentine

National Centre in HIV Social Research and at the Social Policy Research Centre, both at the University of New South Wales

This article combines in-depth interviews and Karen Barad's work on materiality to think about the ways in which the materiality of blood might be understood in relation to sociality and blood-borne virus prevention among BDSM (bondage and domination, dominance and submission and sadomasochism) body modification practitioners in Sydney, Australia. In doing so, it confronts questions of how the materiality of blood can be theorized in ways that neither presume a fixed, a priori ontological status or essence, nor exclude it from an active role in the production of realities. In taking account of both its co-constitutive role in practice, and its figurative power (as flow) in understanding the mind/body, discourse/materiality conjunctions at work in BDSM body modification practice, we aim to illuminate further the imbrication of materiality and meaning, and generate a more complex and fruitful account of blood for the purposes of blood-borne virus prevention and education.

Key Words: public health • risk • ritual • science studies • sexuality

Body & Society, Vol. 12, No. 1, 97-119 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1357034X06061191


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