ScholarGate
Assistent

The Body in Cultural Theory

How the body moved to the centre of cultural theory — not as raw biology but as a surface inscribed by culture, disciplined by power, and lived as gendered experience.

Onderwerp vinden met PaperMindBinnenkortFind papers & topics
Tools & resources
Dia's downloaden
Learn & explore
VideoBinnenkort

Definition

The body in cultural theory is treated not as a fixed biological given but as a cultural and historical surface: shaped by discourse, disciplined by power, marked by gender and class, and increasingly worked upon as a project of identity.

Scope

This topic covers the cultural theorisation of the body: the body as inscribed by discourse and power following Foucault, feminist corporeal theory, and the body as a project in consumer culture. It does not cover the medical or biological study of the body.

Core questions

  • Is the body natural, or culturally produced?
  • How is power inscribed on and through bodies?
  • How do gender, consumer culture, and discipline shape embodiment?

Key theories

The inscribed and disciplined body
Following Foucault, theorists treat the body as a surface on which power and discourse are inscribed, producing it as docile, gendered, and normalised.
Corporeal feminism
Grosz and others insisted on the sexual specificity of bodies, refusing both biological essentialism and a disembodied constructionism in favour of a corporeal feminism.

History

Drawing on Foucault's account of the disciplined body and on phenomenology, cultural and feminist theorists from the late 1980s made the body a central object. Bordo analysed bodies, gender, and consumer culture, Grosz developed a corporeal feminism, and sociologists such as Shilling theorised the body as a project in late modernity.

Debates

Constructed surface versus lived flesh
A tension persists between treating the body as a culturally inscribed surface and insisting on the irreducible reality of lived, material embodiment.

Key figures

  • Susan Bordo
  • Elizabeth Grosz
  • Chris Shilling
  • Michel Foucault

Related topics

Seminal works

  • bordo1993
  • grosz1994
  • shilling1993

Frequently asked questions

Why would cultural theory study the body?
Because the body is where culture, power, and identity become concrete: norms of beauty, discipline, gender, and health are all worked out on and through bodies.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts