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  1. Introduction: The Legacies and Limits of The Body in Pain.Timothy J. Huzar & Leila Dawney - 2019 - Body and Society 25 (3):3-21.
    Since its publication in 1985, Elaine Scarry's The Body in Pain has become a seminal text in the study of embodiment. In its foregrounding of the body in war and torture, it critiques the minimising of the body in questions of politics, offering a compelling account of the structure and phenomenology of violent domination. However, at the same time the text can be seen to shore up a mind/body dualism that has been associated with oppressive forms of gendering, racialisation and (...)
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  • Walter Benjamin.Peter Osborne - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  • Horrorism in the scene of torture: reading Scarry with Cavarero.Timothy Huzar - 2017 - Journal of Interdisciplinary Video Studies 2 (1):25-43.
    In this article I read Elaine Scarry’s account of torture in her The Body in Pain alongside Adriana Cavarero’s account voice and its relationship to violence in her A più voci: Per una filosofia dell’espressione vocale and Orrorismo: Ovvero della violenza sull’inerme. This serves a dual purpose: first, to demonstrate that Scarry’s account of torture is implicitly committed to an Aristotelian distinction between phone and logos which mirrors Cavarero’s account of ‘The Devocalization of Logos’ ; and second, to probe the (...)
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