Body and Society 26 (2):30-54 (2020)
Abstract |
Breath is invisible and yet ever present and vital for living beings. The concept of invisibility in relation to breath operates in concrete and metaphorical ways to extend ideas about breath and breathlessness across disciplines, in clinical spaces and in life experience. Using a critical medical humanities approach, I demonstrate that the poverty of narrative accounts and language for breath outside the health context have had a crucial influence enabling clinically mediated interpretations and accounts to dominate. These third-person accounts are important in the articulation of the ‘lived body’, but I balance this with a consideration of the subjective sensation of interoception, which has important implications for the visibility of breathlessness in both clinical and lay contexts. This article illustrates the rich potential of the subjects of breath and breathlessness within body studies and this special issue is a key step in making breath such an emergent topic.
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DOI | 10.1177/1357034x20902526 |
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References found in this work BETA
The Body and Shame: Phenomenology, Feminism, and the Socially Shaped Body.Luna Dolezal - 2015 - Lexington Books.
Critical Medical Humanities: Embracing Entanglement, Taking Risks.William Viney, Felicity Callard & Angela Woods - 2015 - Medical Humanities 41 (1):2-7.
How to Talk About the Body? The Normative Dimension of Science Studies.Bruno Latour - 2004 - Body and Society 10 (2-3):205-229.
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Citations of this work BETA
Earth(L)y Pleasures and Air-Borne Bodies: Elemental Haptics in Women’s Cross-Country Running.Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson & Patricia Jackman - 2021 - International Review for the Sociology of Sport 3 (Online early).
Neoliberal Misfits: Reconceptualizing Debility in the Critical Medical Humanities.Tobias Skiveren - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Humanities:1-13.
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