Surgery
Junkies
Price: $21.95
Subtitle: Wellness and Pathology in
Cosmetic Culture
Author: Victoria Pitts-Taylor
Subject: Cultural Studies / Health and
Medicine / Sociology
Paper ISBN 0-8135-4048-8
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-4047-X
Pages: 216 pages
Publication Date: May 2007
Read
and Search inside the Book:
Praise for Surgery Junkies
" Surgery Junkies is an innovative, fast-paced mix
of theory and empirical research that advances our understanding of
contemporary bodies, lifestyle medicine, and the making of the
embodied, self-fashioned self. Scholars and teachers of cultural and
media studies, sociology of the body, and health and society will value
its contributions to both their research and their teaching."-Arthur W.
Frank, author of The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and
Ethics and The Renewal of Generosity: Illness, Medicine, and How to
Live
Description:
The ease of accessibility, improvements in safety and
technology, media attention, growing acceptance by the public, or an
increasingly superficial culture: whatever the reason, cosmetic surgery
is more popular today than ever. In 2005, in the United States alone,
there were nearly two million aesthetic operations-more than quadruple
the number from 1984, along with more than eight million non-surgical
procedures. Innovative surgical methods have also brought cosmetic
improvements to new areas of the body, such as the ribs, buttocks, and
genitalia.
Despite the increasing normalization of cosmetic surgery,
however, there are still those who identify individuals who opt for
bodily modifications as dupes of beauty culture, as being in conflict
with feminist ideals, or as having some form of psychological weakness.
In this ground-breaking book, Victoria Pitts-Taylor examines why we
consider some cosmetic surgeries to be acceptable or even beneficial
and others to be unacceptable and possibly harmful. Similarly, why are
some patients considered to be psychologically healthy while others
deemed pathological? When is the modification of our appearance
empowering and when is it a sign of weakness?
Drawing on years of research, her personal experience with
cosmetic surgery, analysis of newspaper articles and television shows,
and in-depth interviews with surgeons, psychiatrists, lawyers, judges,
and others, Pitts-Taylor brings new perspectives to the promotion of
"extreme" makeovers on television, the medicalization of "surgery
addiction," the moral and political interrogation that many patients
face, and feminist debates on the topic.
While many feel that cosmetic surgery is a deeply personal
choice and that its pathology is rooted in the individual psyche,
Pitts-Taylor makes a compelling argument that the experience, meanings,
and motivations for cosmetic surgery are highly social. A much needed
"makeover" of our cultural understanding of cosmetic surgery, this book
is both authoritative and thoroughly engaging.
About the Author:
Victoria Pitts-Taylor is associate professor of
sociology at Queens College and the Graduate Center, City University of
New York. She is the author of In the Flesh: The Cultural Politics
of Body Modification.
Receive
special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $21.95
|