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The becoming of bodies

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Thinking through original empirical research, this book explores the relations between girls' bodies and images from a Deleuzian perspective. Holding in suspension models of cause-and-effect and of...
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  • 01 May 2009
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The relationship between bodies and images has long occupied feminism. The becoming of bodies explores the way in which this relationship has primarily been approached and offers an alternative framework for analysis.

Thinking through her original empirical research with teenage girls, involving focus groups, individual interviews and image-making sessions, Coleman moves from a consideration of media images, the focus of much feminist research, to examine images more widely; as mirrors, photographs, glimpses, comments, imagination. Addressing issues of appearance and selfhood, sex and gender, and temporality, the book takes a Deleuzian position to argue that bodies and images are not separable entities but rather entangled processes of becoming. It asks the question: how do bodies become through images?

Making links between empirical research, feminist theory and Deleuzian theory, this book will be essential reading for scholars and students of Sociology, Cultural Studies and Feminist and Gender Studies.

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Price: £85.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 01 May 2009
ISBN: 9780719078217
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, Sociology, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Feminism & Feminist Theory, Gender studies, gender groups, Feminism and feminist theory

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Rebecca Coleman is Lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies at Lancaster University

List of figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction: bodies and images
1. From cause and effect to becoming and affect
2. Immanent experience
3. What can images do?
4. Looks and selves
5. Fighting back
6. Things that stay
Conclusion: become what you want?
References
Appendix: additional images
Index