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The Normal Body - Anthropology of Bodily Otherness Cover
Open Access
|Jun 2011

Abstract

Human biology and medical science focus on the normality of the human body. This focus deserves, however, to be questioned. Cultural studies, in contrast, focus on normalities in plural - normalities of diverse cultures, revealed by comparison and under the historical perspective of change. The normality and otherness of bodily ageing delivers pictures for this analytical problem, among these the figure of the shaman, the elderly as healer.

Normality is connected with power. That is why the cultural analysis of normalization can be connected with the theory of democracy, especially with the understanding of human sovereignty and equality, otherness and recognition.

Likewise, the theory of sports as a field of trialectic tensions opens up concrete, bodily differences. The body of the Japanese sumo wrestler delivers a living picture of how to relate to bodily otherness. This leads to a deeper understanding of the politics of recognition and of bodily relativity. Additionaly, normality in terms of biology and normalities in terms of cultural studies need to be confronted within a critical dialogue.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10141-011-0001-0 | Journal eISSN: 1899-4849 | Journal ISSN: 2081-2221
Language: English
Page range: 5 - 14
Published on: Jun 21, 2011
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: Volume open

© 2011 Henning Eichberg, published by Józef Piłsudski University of Physical Education in Warsaw
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.

Volume 51 (2011): Issue 1 (June 2011)