Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1375Hits:19474832Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID107948
Title ProperIt's my body and i'll do what i like with it
Other Title Informationbodies as objects and property
LanguageENG
AuthorPhillips, Anne
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)What, if any, is the problem with treating bodies as objects or property? Is there a defensible basis for seeing bodies as different from "other" material resources? Or is thinking the body special a kind of sentimentalism that blocks clear thinking about matters such as prostitution, surrogate motherhood, and the sale of spare kidneys? I argue that the language we use does matter, and that thinking of the body as property encourages a self/body dualism that obscures the power relations involved in all contracts that cedes authority over the body. Recognising the self as embodied, however, also makes it harder to insist on sharp distinctions between activities that involve the body and those that "just" involve the mind, hence harder to justify refusing payment for explicitly body services while condoning it for those to which the body is more incidental. I therefore provide a modest defence of monetary compensation for those who "donate" bodily products or services. Compensation does not, however, mean markets for there is at least one sense in which the body is special. This is that more so, and more intrinsically than other markets, markets in body parts or bodily services depend on inequality. I use this to make a case against such markets.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Theory Vol. 39, No. 6; Dec 2011: p.724-748
Journal SourcePolitical Theory Vol. 39, No. 6; Dec 2011: p.724-748
Key WordsBodies ;  Property ;  Markets ;  Prostitution ;  Surrogacy