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Health as moral performance: ritual, transgression and taboo
Simon J. Williams
University of Warwick, UK
Taking as its point of departure the problematic distinction between illness as deviance and health as conformity, this article ventures an alternative notion of health which oscillates precariously between bodily discipline and corporeal transgression; modalities which both reflect and reproduce fundamental tensions and contradictions in Western culture. Underlying this is a notion of the recalcitrant body; one which, as an (un) containable entity in any one domain or discourse, demands both cultural limits and points of corporeal transgression. Drawing upon recent sociological and anthropological work within this area, these issues are illustrated through: (i) the ritual performance of health as dilemmatic; (ii) the cultural shift towards more holistic, emotionally expressive, forms of health and embodiment; and (iii) the so-called resacralization of social life and resurgence of emotions and effervescent bodies at the turn of the century: developments which, it is suggested, hold out both positive and negative possibilities.
Key Words: body emotions health moral performance ritual taboo transgression
Health:, Vol. 2, No. 4,
435-457 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/136345939800200401

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