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The Body of History


Article # : 17217 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 2 / 1990  4,454 Words
Author : Edward S. Casey
Edward S. Casey is professor of philosophy at the State University of New York at Stony Brook and the author of Imagining: A Phenomenological Study (Indiana University Press, 1976) and Remembering: A Phenomenological Study (Indiana University Press, 1987). He is also the coeditor of Explorations in Phenomenology and of The Life of the Transcendental Ego and he is the translator of two books by Mikel Dufrenne, the French phenomenologist.

       FRAGMENTS FOR A HISTORY OF THE HUMAN BODY
       Ed. Michel Feher with Ramona Naddaff and Nadia Tazi
       New York: Zone, 1989
       Three volumes, approx. 1,800 pp., $19.95 per volume (paper), $37.95 (cloth)
       
        Does the human body have a history? It is odd to think that it does when we assume, as most of us do, that the body - which is to say, my body and your body, anybody's own body - is peculiar to each of us, unique in its physical features and wholly personal in its internal feeling. Indeed, an entire tradition in philosophy has pinned our very personal identity on our bodily being: What first, and perhaps also last, distinguishes me from you is the sheer fact that your body looks different from mine. Whatever common history - we are differentiated from each other precisely as material bodies. "The identity of indiscernibles" (as Leibniz formulated it) is nowhere seen more perspicuously than just here: If I were not discernible from you at the level of ordinary perception, I would be you - you yourself.
       
        Not only at the level of perception (where material particularity is paramount) but in other ways as well, we tend to believe that our bodies are idiosyncratic. A powerful reinforcement of this view has come from psychoanalysis, especially in its Freudian format. Freud stressed the primacy of ontogenesis in the fate of instinctual vicissitudes. If there is a history of the body in Freud's view, it is the history of an individual's own convoluted interactions with parents and other significant figures. While interested in questions of phylogenesis or the evolution of the human species as a whole, ... (1996 of 25869 Characters)
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