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<title>Body &amp; Society</title>
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<title><![CDATA[Introduction: Blood Donation, Bioeconomy, Culture]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/2/1?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Copeman, J.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103435</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Introduction: Blood Donation, Bioeconomy, Culture]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>28</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>1</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
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<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/29?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Solidarity and Distinction in Blood: Contamination, Morality and Variability]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/29?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This is an ethnographic exploration into the meanings of contaminated blood. Intense commercial harvesting of human plasma, a blood component, in rural central China during the 1990s resulted in extensive HIV infection among donors. The lack of viral diversity among these infected donors, as revealed by research in molecular epidemiology, confirms that this epidemic took hold and spread rapidly with deadly efficiency through unsanitary plasmapheresis. The distinction in viral strains between this epidemic and the spread of HIV via other routes of transmission in other parts of China serves also to promote claims to victimhood by infected rural commercial donors in the ambiguous geography of moral ambivalence towards carriers of the virus. Through a series of vignettes from field research among rural plasma donors in China, this article examines the tensions between solidarity and distinction, victimhood and responsibility, alliance and strife as they play out in meanings derived from contaminated blood, within their everyday experience and also within their participation in the broader HIV/AIDS activism, in which their distinction is inevitably challenged.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jing Shao,  , Scoggin, M.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103436</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Solidarity and Distinction in Blood: Contamination, Morality and Variability]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>49</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>29</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
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<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/51?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Glorious Deeds: Work Unit Blood Donation and Postsocialist Desires in Urban China]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/51?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>With advances in medical technology, the potential uses for human blood have proliferated, and in turn, so has the demand for blood. Blood and blood products circulate in a medical marketplace as a `good' that can be bought and sold to meet various health and commercial demands. Nevertheless, its point of origin &mdash; or `production' &mdash; remains the individual human body, and reliance on voluntary blood donation remains a cornerstone for meeting this growing market demand. This article examines the contradictions surrounding blood donation in the ethnographic context of contemporary urban China. Specifically, it focuses on both how the circulation of blood outside the individual body interfaces with its circulation in the Chinese social body, and how individual Chinese conceptualize their acts of donation in this process. In ethnographic interviews for this project, many urbanites describe donation as both voluntary and as meeting a social obligation. Yet their donation practices remain structured by meeting work unit quotas and are compensated with monetary and food donations and paid time off. Their descriptions of the mechanisms for motivating and compensating donors echo the socialist calls for contributing to society's greater good typical of the Maoist era propaganda. These descriptions highlight the complexities of sociocultural change in what has come to be described in much of the literature as a `postsocialist' Chinese society characterized by a burgeoning consumer culture and increasing emergence of individual autonomy. Our interviews suggest that the socialist workplace remains a critical social and economic structure in China through which workers' production is transformed into a social `good'. This transformation originates within the individual bodies of workers (not on the factory floor) and is extracted through exhortations to contribute to better society via the work unit and one's obligations to the work unit. Rather than a shift to individual autonomy and self-improvement, or a re-emergence of traditional values &mdash; both of which have been described as hallmarks of the postsocialist era &mdash; this process highlights the role that the socialist work unit plays in defining Chinese citizenship, consumer culture and embodied desires.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Erwin, K., Adams, V., Le, P.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103437</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Glorious Deeds: Work Unit Blood Donation and Postsocialist Desires in Urban China]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>70</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>51</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/71?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Gathering Points: Blood Donation and the Scenography of `National Integration' in India]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/71?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This article explores nationalist interpretations of blood donation activity, examining how some Indians read integrative messages into the practical procedures through which blood is donated and distributed. The first post-Independence Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, proclaimed the need for `national integration' as a bulwark against a myriad of linguistic, caste and ethnic agitations that threatened to disrupt the unity of the newly formed nation-state. This article shows that a striking manifestation of the Nehruvian ideology of national integration possesses a compelling presence in the Indian blood donation milieu. Scholars of India have long been preoccupied with documenting attempts by the Hindu right to redefine the nation in exclusively Hindu, anti-Nehruvian terms. Questioning the prevailing assumption that the only thing that counts politically in India today is the debunking or overriding of Nehruvian ideals of the secular inclusive nation, this article rehabilitates Nehruvianism as an important ethnographic subject. In so doing it demonstrates the roles of anonymity, enumeration and an array of technical and imaginative gathering points in the formation of the `difference-traversing gift'. The article also highlights ways in which technology may be employed for the imagining of social diversity.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Copeman, J.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103438</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Gathering Points: Blood Donation and the Scenography of `National Integration' in India]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>99</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>71</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
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<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/101?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[`Please Give a Drop of Blood': Blood Donation, Conflict and the Haemato-Global Assemblage in Contemporary Sri Lanka]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/101?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Blood is now essential for a widening repertoire of therapies and with this comes new forms of regulation and governmentality focused on the collection, use and storage of blood. Here blood begins to lose its `natural' underpinnings as it is drawn into the realms of the synthetic and the scientific. However, this change in theoretical lens obscures the ways that, in practice, constructing a `modern' blood compatible with the demands of the global biopolis is elided with prosaic uses of blood donation that convey powerful cultural and political messages at the local level. In a setting where, in recent decades, war, violence and the threat of social disintegration have been woven into the project of development and modernity, attempts at an alignment, or what might be characterized as the haemato-global assemblage, reveal significant tensions. The main one that I explore in this article is that between the aspiration to create an international blood donation service in which ideas of citizens and national solidarity are articulated through freely and altruistically gifted blood on the one hand and, on the other, the more potent and symbolically loaded ideas of blood, which come to the fore when connection and identity are threatened.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Simpson, B.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103439</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[`Please Give a Drop of Blood': Blood Donation, Conflict and the Haemato-Global Assemblage in Contemporary Sri Lanka]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>122</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>101</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/123?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Alleviative Bleeding: Bloodletting, Menstruation and the Politics of Ignorance in a Brazilian Blood Donation Centre]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/123?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This article focuses on blood donation as a form of bloodletting in a context where donation is commonly seen to alleviate the symptoms of `thick blood'. It deals with the gendered aspects of blood donation, and the parallels drawn between donating blood and menstruating. Women are seen not to need to donate blood as much as men, who, in the absence of menstruation, are more prone to thick blood and require a means to expunge the ensuing excess. While blood donation professionals strive to reconstruct donation as a selfless and ungendered act, counterposing the `facts' of arterial blood circulation to local blood-lore and beliefs, lay understandings challenge this construction in the use they make of blood donation centres or by reiterating the personalistic and gendered dimensions of donation. The article explores cases of patients who use hormonal contraceptives which suppress menstruation and express concerns over the resulting accumulation of blood in the body. It considers how blood donation is adopted by some women as a means of dispelling both the perceived inconveniences of menstrual bleeding and its swelling effects. Such literalized engagements with medical technologies reveal a conception of the body as a permeable, malleable and recipient-like enclosure. These views are often characterized as `ignorance' by medical practitioners, where ignorance is seen to derive not only from the absence of knowledge, but from the presence of the wrong kind of knowledge.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sanabria, E.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09104112</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Alleviative Bleeding: Bloodletting, Menstruation and the Politics of Ignorance in a Brazilian Blood Donation Centre]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>144</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>123</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/145?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Emplacement and Contamination: Mediation of Navajo Identity through Excorporated Blood]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/145?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>On the heels of colonization, missionization, capitalistic development and globalization, contemporary members of the Navajo Nation are daily inundated with a variety of tensions associated with the `politics of identity'. Based on recent consultations with Navajo of all walks of life about how they accommodate biomedical technologies within their religiously and medically pluralistic world, this article demonstrates how Navajo people anchor relatedness within their sacred space through the use of language, detached bodily substances or parts, and ritualized practices. These speech acts and practices, which are routinely done in the simultaneous process of person-and-place building, are also done to intentionally reinforce fragile social relations or perhaps more importantly to re-embed disrupted social relations through the process of emplacement. Using ethnographic information about Navajo views on the bioeconomy of excorporated bodily substances, this article considers how Navajo people specifically use decisions regarding blood donation or transfusion to strengthen individual and collective identity.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Schwarz, M. T.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103440</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Emplacement and Contamination: Mediation of Navajo Identity through Excorporated Blood]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>168</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>145</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/169?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Vital Publics of Pure Blood]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/2/169?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Blood supplies have become indexes of national security and the public good. While blood shortages can provoke anxiety, controversies continue to erupt in many countries over proper donor screening, especially with reference to HIV. This article sketches these dynamics in several global settings, focusing especially on activist efforts by gay men to reform exclusionary blood donor guidelines. The contours of the debate recall familiar conflicts between the putative demands of public health and the rights of individuals in the era of AIDS. However, if gay activists marshal a discourse of individual rights vis-a-vis forms of institutional exclusion, they also seek a broader shift in social and cultural understandings of gay identity. To capture this complex interplay of citizenship and sociality, risk and responsibility, the article introduces the notion of `vital publics' to refer to the peculiar associational form represented by blood supplies. Vital publics are kinds of embodied association elicited through the generalized exchange of body &mdash; in this case, blood. Hailed to `give life' by the jargon of the pervasive social marketing of varied blood service systems, activists seek to contribute to the life of the `vital public' that transfusion medicine calls into being.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Strong, T.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103441</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Vital Publics of Pure Blood]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>191</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>169</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/2/193?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Failed Recipients: Extracting Blood in a Papua New Guinean Hospital]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/2/193?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Street, A.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103442</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Failed Recipients: Extracting Blood in a Papua New Guinean Hospital]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>215</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>193</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/2/217?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Afterword]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/2/217?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Strathern, M.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-06-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09103443</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Afterword]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>2</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>222</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-06-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>217</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/1?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Embryonic Entitlements: Stem Cell Patenting and the Co-production of Commodities and Personhood]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/1?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>With the aim of understanding current problematizations of embryonic stem cell patenting this article rehearses the history of social entitlements related to reproductive material derived from women seeking care in institutions for reproductive health in Denmark. Our interest lies in the emergence of commercial exchange of material derived from embryos. Such exchange is characterized by contestation of the status of the embryo: is it a person or a commodity? To understand the modus operandi of the exchanges, we first explore how the concepts of personhood and morality, of commodity and ownership tend to be related in the ideal type of capitalist exchange. Historical context then helps us understand the contingency of exchange systems. Historically Danish women have had much less influence on the dissemination of material derived from them than they do today. However, today their entitlements have also found their limits, in particular with respect to commercial transactions. We claim that, ironically, material derived from institutionally mediated reproduction gains unprecedented personhood from confrontation with a capitalist exchange form which potentially designates it as a mere commodity.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Hoeyer, K., Nexoe, S., Hartlev, M., Koch, L.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100143</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Embryonic Entitlements: Stem Cell Patenting and the Co-production of Commodities and Personhood]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>24</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
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<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
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<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/25?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[When Alcohol Acts: An Actor-Network Approach to Teenagers, Alcohol and Parties]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/25?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Sociological studies into alcohol use seem to find it difficult to deal with the substance itself. Alcohol tends to be reduced to a symbol of a social process and in this way the sociological research loses sight of effects beyond the social. This article suggests a new theoretical approach to the study of alcohol and teenagers' (romantic) relationships, inspired by actor-network theory (ANT). The central feature of ANT is to search for relationships, or rather networks, between all things relevant to the phenomenon. All material and semantic structures, things, persons, discourses, etc. that influence a given situation are described as actants and are entered into the analysis. The aim of this article is to propose a way of including materiality in sociological analyses of alcohol and to explore ways of using focus group interview material in ANT-inspired analysis. By analysing a girl's development from being a non-drinker at the age of 14, to a heavy drinker at 16, the article investigates how the actants brought out by young people in the focus groups themselves constitute different forms of agency. The analysis is based on a qualitative study consisting of 37 focus groups conducted with teenagers in Denmark over a three-year period.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Demant, J.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100145</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[When Alcohol Acts: An Actor-Network Approach to Teenagers, Alcohol and Parties]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>46</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>25</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/47?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[This Body Which is Not One: The Body, Femininity and Disability]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/47?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>In the social system in which we live, the imaginary body is an able body. The able-bodied has established its representations that are the projection of able-bodied subjectivities. In this article, I shall develop a psychoanalytic account of physical disability in order to open up possibilities for physical disability beyond its position as castrated able-bodiedness. Psychoanalysis, to me, is not simply about `sexuality' but can also be used to analyse `physical disability', indeed all aspects of one's subjectivity. I shall propose the appropriation of psychoanalysis to explain the construction of subjectivity, whether it is able-bodied or disabled, in a way that parallels the male/female dichotomy. Within an able-bodied symbolic, in which the able-bodied takes itself as normal, it is impossible to illustrate the multiplicity of the disabled. Following Irigaray's claim that the ambiguity of female sexuality does not conform to male notions of sexuality, I argue that the complexity of the disabled body does not fit into the able-bodied norm of subjectivity. In this article, I shall be drawing on Irigaray's theory of embodied subjectivity to argue against the masculine-able-bodied-based theory of subjectivity found in Freud and Lacan.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Inahara, M.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100146</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[This Body Which is Not One: The Body, Femininity and Disability]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>62</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>47</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/63?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[`Flagging' the Skin: Corporeal Nationalism and the Properties of Belonging]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/63?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Just as the nation is imagined and produced through everyday rhetoric and maps and flags, it is also constructed on the skin, and through bodies, by different types of corporeal `flagging'. In this article, I use two examples of contemporary surgical procedures to explore these dynamics. Aesthetic surgeries on `white' subjects are not often interrogated for their racializing effects, but I use the concept of `flagging' to explore how these surgeries work in the UK to align `white' bodies with a white nation. US media coverage of Iraq invasion veterans with prosthetic limbs circulates narratives of heroism and patriotism, and I explore how the apparent `visibility' of these limbs works to re-embed notions of the US as a transcendent Christian nation. In these two examples of corporeal modification, the nation is `flagged' on the skin, reiterating relationships of belonging that echo practical and conceptual links with property. Propertied belonging &mdash; possessive and constitutive &mdash; unfolds through bodies, producing whiteness not only as property itself, but also as unmarked, habitual terrain.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Grabham, E.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100147</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[`Flagging' the Skin: Corporeal Nationalism and the Properties of Belonging]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>82</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>63</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/83?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Gender Capital and Male Bodybuilders]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/15/1/83?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Cultural capital and hegemonic masculinity are two concepts that have received intense attention. While both have received serious consideration, critique and analysis, the context or field-specificity of each is sometimes ignored. They have been used in a diversity of ways. Using ethnographic and interview data from a US male bodybuilding community, this study highlights one useful employment. Hegemonic masculinity takes different shapes in different fields of interaction, acting as a form of cultural capital: gender capital. Inherent in this discussion are the cultural contradictions apparent among individuals striving for either physical or ideological embodiments of gender capital. Individuals can attempt to embody hegemonic idealizations, but bodies are not only inscribed with gender, inscriptions are read, and read differently by different social actors and in different settings. The capacity of gender capital to remain elusive is precisely what enables gender practices and projects like bodybuilding to retain passionate participation.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bridges, T. S.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100148</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Gender Capital and Male Bodybuilders]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>107</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>83</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/1/109?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Book Review: The Medicalisation of Cyberspace by Andy Miah and Emma Rich London and New York: Routledge, 2008, pp. xv, 160, ISBN 978--0-415--39364--5 (pbk), {pound}21.99]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/1/109?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Rubinelli, S.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100149</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Book Review: The Medicalisation of Cyberspace by Andy Miah and Emma Rich London and New York: Routledge, 2008, pp. xv, 160, ISBN 978--0-415--39364--5 (pbk), {pound}21.99]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>112</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>109</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/1/112?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Book Review: Cyborgs and Barbie Dolls: Feminism, Popular Culture and the Posthuman Body by Kim Toffoletti London: I.B. Tauris, 2007, pp. 205, ISBN 978--1-845--11467--1 (pbk), {pound}17.99]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/1/112?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Bakke, G.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X090150010602</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Book Review: Cyborgs and Barbie Dolls: Feminism, Popular Culture and the Posthuman Body by Kim Toffoletti London: I.B. Tauris, 2007, pp. 205, ISBN 978--1-845--11467--1 (pbk), {pound}17.99]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>114</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>112</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/1/115?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Erratum]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/1/115?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-03-09</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X09104490</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Erratum]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>1</prism:number>
<prism:volume>15</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>115</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2009-03-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>115</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/4/1?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Introduction: Sleeping Bodies]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/4/1?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Williams, S. J., Crossley, N.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096892</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Introduction: Sleeping Bodies]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>13</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>1</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/15?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Norms, Forms and Beds: Spatializing Sleep in Victorian Britain]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/15?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This article examines the spatialization of sleep in Victorian Britain across a range of institutions, including homes and dormitories. It situates the emergence of modern sleeping space at the intersection of two key narratives regarding the history of the body: Elias's `civilising process' and Foucault's account of the realization of a `disciplinary society'. Beginning in the early modern period, sleeping bodies were gradually accorded their own space set apart from others, and by the end of the 19th century the individual bed was regarded as an essential ingredient of civilized society. However, the evolution of modern sleeping space was only in part informed by ideas of privacy and civility: it was also animated by ideas concerning the functioning of `normal' bodies and minds, the governmental agency of space and the moral integrity of nuclear families. Furthermore, the bed remained a highly problematic, indeterminate space, facilitating deviant as much as civilized behaviour, and giving rise to all manner of pathologies, perversities and phobias. In this respect, the history of sleeping space also sheds light on the reciprocities of rule and resistance, pleasure and power, which at once constitute and imperil the integrity of the modern body.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Crook, T.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096893</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Norms, Forms and Beds: Spatializing Sleep in Victorian Britain]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>35</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>15</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/37?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Depth and Space in Sleep: Intimacy, Touch and the Body in Japanese Co-sleeping Rituals]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/37?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p><b>s</b> This article centres on an empirically based phenomenological analysis of how children are put to sleep in Japanese nurseries. Drawing on interviews and participant-observations conducted at a daycare centre in north-east Japan, this article explores the cultural and social meanings attached to co-sleeping. It explores the process through which co-sleeping becomes a manifestation of intimacy, and emphasizes the sensuous and embodied experience of sleep between teacher and child. Examining alternative theories of embodiment, this article helps to extend our understanding of experiences of co-sleeping from finite separate bodies, to a sensuous experience and space that is all-encompassing and inclusive of more than just the body (non-Cartesian).</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Tahhan, D. A.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096894</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Depth and Space in Sleep: Intimacy, Touch and the Body in Japanese Co-sleeping Rituals]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>56</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>37</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/57?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Awake, Asleep, Adult, Child: An A-humanist Account of Persons]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/57?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p><b>s</b> Sleeping persons do not seem to be agents, to express identity or to give voice. On one view this means that social research on sleep would do best to focus on the social context of sleep rather than sleep `itself'. If the only analytic vocabulary at our disposal consists of abstractions that assume the existence of self-conscious, self-present individuals, this conclusion is probably correct. This article, however, builds on the work of some contemporary childhood researchers to offer an account of the `person' as an emergent property of distributed interactions between heterogeneous elements. The account is built through a discussion of `transitional objects' and `affects'. It is argued that this version of the `person' could help social research to make sense of both sides of the awake/asleep threshold. The potential contribution of this approach to the emerging bio-politics of childhood and states of un/consciousness is discussed.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lee, N.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096895</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Awake, Asleep, Adult, Child: An A-humanist Account of Persons]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>74</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>57</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/75?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Unruly Bodies and Couples' Sleep]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/75?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p><b>s</b> This article focuses on the recent production of sleep as a matter of concern in American society. In it, I draw primarily on fieldwork with sleep researchers and clinicians to understand the means by which ideas about sleep are produced and disseminated, and discuss the rise of sleep medicine since the late 1970s and the ways sleep disabilities have been constructed and mobilized in contemporary allopathic research and practice. The article provides a description of modern sleep medicine practices, and analyses clinical encounters between researchers, clinicians and patients, particularly the ways patient cases are produced and interpreted. I follow these ethnographic observations with textual analysis of the National Sleep Foundation's campaigns to promote sleep awareness, and offer the theoretical concepts of medical abstraction and insistence as a means to understand the production of sleep as a matter of concern, and how it might be made to adhere in particular patients' lives and the practices of clinicians.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Meadows, R., Arber, S., Venn, S., Hislop, J.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096896</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Unruly Bodies and Couples' Sleep]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>91</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>75</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/93?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Sleep, Signification and the Abstract Body of Allopathic Medicine]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/93?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>This article focuses on the recent production of sleep as a matter of concern in American society. In it, I draw primarily on fieldwork with sleep researchers and clinicians to understand the means by which ideas about sleep are produced and disseminated, and discuss the rise of sleep medicine since the late 1970s and the ways sleep disabilities have been constructed and mobilized in contemporary allopathic research and practice. The article provides a description of modern sleep medicine practices, and analyses clinical encounters between researchers, clinicians and patients, particularly the ways patient cases are produced and interpreted. I follow these ethnographic observations with textual analysis of the National Sleep Foundation's campaigns to promote sleep awareness, and offer the theoretical concepts of medical abstraction and insistence as a means to understand the production of sleep as a matter of concern, and how it might be made to adhere in particular patients' lives and the practices of clinicians.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Wolf-Meyer, M.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096897</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Sleep, Signification and the Abstract Body of Allopathic Medicine]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>114</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>93</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/115?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Reading Sleep through Science Fiction: The Parable of Beggars and Choosers]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/14/4/115?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p><b>s</b> This article examines the iconic `Beggars' trilogy by feminist science fiction writer, Nancy Kress. These novels, produced in the early to mid-1990s, take as their `thought experiment' two points of rupture and contemporary cultural contestation: the advent of human genetic engineering and sleep, or, more specifically, the prospect of a sleepless society. I shall begin by situating my analysis of the Kress trilogy in this nexus of fields. I shall consider the interest of Kress's works for the sociology of sleep as well as for a cultural analysis of science. In this context, and drawing in part on the work of Haran, I will suggest the particular value of science fiction as not only a <I>site for</I>, but also a <I>source of</I>, narrativized social theory. I shall introduce the notion of <I>popular episteme</I> as an analytic concept that aims to link the discursive to the social &mdash; that is, to theorize the relationship of textuality to materiality. In this context, I shall refer also to the psychoanalytic concept of `phantasy' as a point of convergence for both structures of <I>feeling</I> and structures of knowledge. I shall then introduce the Kress works, focusing particularly on the first novel <I>Beggars in Spain</I>, locating it in a period in which feminist science fiction saw a marked renaissance, and in which speculative theorizations of genetics formed a distinct subgenre. The analysis will then focus on three core themes emergent in the novels that, I shall argue, have profound contemporaneous resonance. These are the questions of: embodied capital; the political economy of what I will term <I>fast time</I>; and paranoia and the human condition.</p>]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Steinberg, D. L.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08096898</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Reading Sleep through Science Fiction: The Parable of Beggars and Choosers]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>135</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>115</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/4/137?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Index to Volume 14, 2008]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/4/137?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-12-03</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08100306</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Index to Volume 14, 2008]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>4</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>138</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-12-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>137</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/1?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[The Ageing Body and the Ontology of Ageing: Athletic Competence in Later Life]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/1?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Tulle, E.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-28</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08093570</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[The Ageing Body and the Ontology of Ageing: Athletic Competence in Later Life]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>3</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>19</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-09-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>1</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/21?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Squaring the Curve: The Anatomo-Politics of Ageing, Life and Death]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/21?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Moreira, T., Palladino, P.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-28</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08093571</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Squaring the Curve: The Anatomo-Politics of Ageing, Life and Death]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>3</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>47</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-09-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>21</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/49?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[`I Know My Own Body': Power and Resistance in Women's Experiences of Medical Interactions]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/49?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lorentzen, J. M.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-28</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08093572</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[`I Know My Own Body': Power and Resistance in Women's Experiences of Medical Interactions]]></dc:title>
<dc:publisher>The TCS Centre, Nottingham Trent University</dc:publisher>
<prism:number>3</prism:number>
<prism:volume>14</prism:volume>
<prism:endingPage>79</prism:endingPage>
<prism:publicationDate>2008-09-01</prism:publicationDate>
<prism:startingPage>49</prism:startingPage>
<prism:section>Article</prism:section>
</item>

<item rdf:about="http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/81?rss=1">
<title><![CDATA[Tackling the `Body Inescapable' in Sport: Body--Artifact Kinesthetics, Embodied Skill and the Community of Practice in Lacrosse Masculinity]]></title>
<link>http://bod.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/14/3/81?rss=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Schyfter, P.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-28</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08093573</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Tackling the `Body Inescapable' in Sport: Body--Artifact Kinesthetics, Embodied Skill and the Community of Practice in Lacrosse Masculinity]]></dc:title>
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<title><![CDATA[Simulating Medical Patients and Practices: Bodies and the Construction of Valid Medical Simulators]]></title>
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<dc:creator><![CDATA[Johnson, E.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-28</dc:date>
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<dc:title><![CDATA[Simulating Medical Patients and Practices: Bodies and the Construction of Valid Medical Simulators]]></dc:title>
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<title><![CDATA[Review Article: Somaesthetics and the Critique of Cartesian Dualism: Body Consciousness: A Philosophy of Mindfulness and Somaesthetics by Richard Shusterman Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008, pp. 256, ISBN 978--0--521--67587--1 paperback, $24.99 Reviewed by Bryan S. Turner, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore]]></title>
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<dc:creator><![CDATA[Turner, B. S.]]></dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-28</dc:date>
<dc:identifier>info:doi/10.1177/1357034X08093575</dc:identifier>
<dc:title><![CDATA[Review Article: Somaesthetics and the Critique of Cartesian Dualism: Body Consciousness: A Philosophy of Mindfulness and Somaesthetics by Richard Shusterman Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008, pp. 256, ISBN 978--0--521--67587--1 paperback, $24.99 Reviewed by Bryan S. Turner, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore]]></dc:title>
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<prism:number>3</prism:number>
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