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So Much Wasted: Hunger, Performance, and the Morbidity of Resistance
Contributor(s): Anderson, Patrick (Author)
ISBN: 0822348195     ISBN-13: 9780822348191
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $94.95  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: October 2010
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Performing Arts | Theater - History & Criticism
- Literary Criticism | Semiotics & Theory
- Social Science | Violence In Society
Dewey: 303.61
LCCN: 2010022498
Series: Perverse Modernities
Physical Information: 208 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In So Much Wasted, Patrick Anderson analyzes self-starvation as a significant mode of staging political arguments across the institutional domains of the clinic, the gallery, and the prison. Homing in on those who starve themselves for various reasons and the cultural and political contexts in which they do so, he examines the diagnostic history of anorexia nervosa, fasts staged by artists including Ana Mendieta and Marina Abramovic, and a hunger strike initiated by Turkish prisoners. Anderson explores what it means for the clinic, the gallery, and the prison when one performs a refusal to consume as a strategy of negation or resistance, and the ways that self-starvation, as a project of refusal aimed, however unconsciously, toward death, produces violence, suffering, disappearance, and loss differently from other practices. Drawing on the work of Martin Heidegger, Sigmund Freud, Giorgio Agamben, Peggy Phelan, and others, he considers how the subject of self-starvation is refigured in relation to larger institutional and ideological drives, including those of the state. The ontological significance of performance as disappearance constitutes what Anderson calls the "politics of morbidity," the embodied, interventional embrace of mortality and disappearance not as destructive, but rather as radically productive stagings of subject formations in which subjectivity and objecthood, presence and absence, and life and death are intertwined.