Skip to main content

Body, Language

Type: Virtual

Description

I am terrified your body could fall apart at any second    
– Car Seat Headrest

Spinoza famously lamented that we do not even know what bodies can do. Our seminar rephrases this concern to ask: Do we even know what bodies can say? In Corpus, Jean-Luc Nancy wonders if “perhaps body is the word without employment par excellence. Perhaps, in any language, it’s the word in excess.”  If the body is a word, it belongs to language and is subject to what John Hamilton has called the “philology of the flesh”; yet, if it is a word “in excess,” this suggests that the body signifies everything that is not, not yet, or may never become language. We propose to further explore this double bind that recognizes the language of the body but struggles to locate the body within language. Recalling Nietzsche and Foucault, Judith Butler reminds us that “history is the creation of values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.” It would be a fallacy to assume that the body merely offers a pre-discursive materiality open to acts of signification. Rather, these acts that take place on the body’s surface simultaneously shape the body—through the language of the law—and render it culturally intelligible. In our seminar, we plan to examine these violent practices of linguistic subjection and probe the subversive potential of the various languages of the body. What other forms of bodily signification can we imagine?

Possible bodies to discuss include:

•    Animal Bodies (Kafka, Deleuze)
•    Ascetic Bodies (Nietzsche)
•    Gendered, Sexed, Queer, and Trans Bodies (Butler, Preciado, Halberstam)
•    Dancing Bodies (Badiou)
•    Desiring Bodies, Bodies of Pleasure (Bataille, Barthes, Lacan)
•    Ill and Ailing Bodies (Tolstoy, Woolf, Th. Bernhard)
•    Oppressed Bodies (Spillers)
•    Scandalously Speaking Bodies (Felman)
•    Tortured and Incarcerated Bodies, Bodies in Pain (Foucault, Scarry)
•    Written and Inscribed Bodies (Derrida, Nancy)
•    Posthuman Techno-Bodies (Haraway, Braidotti)

We are interested in critical reflections of no more than 20 minutes in length. Proposals for contributions to our seminar must be submitted between September 13 and October 14, 2024, directly through https://www.acla.org/annual-meeting

Please feel free to contact the organizers with your questions at
[email protected] and [email protected] 

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
12:30 PM CDT - 2:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Apostrophe and the Unborn
Emily Apter
The Dragooned Spectator: La traviata norma's Performative Etiolations
Matthew Zundel
The Avoidance of Body
Serena Luckhoff
Stone Femme Blues. Masoch and the Pornologos
Phyllis Koehler
Saturday, May 31, 2025
12:30 PM CDT - 2:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

The Tramp Writes!
Jan Mieszkowski
Corpographies of Poetic Gestures
Melissa Melpignano , Sara Sermini
Captive Negativity / Capting Negatives
Patricia Dailey
Somiosis
Dominik Zechner
Sunday, June 1, 2025
12:30 PM CDT - 2:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Brecht's Buckow Elegies
Anna Hunt
Epilepsy as Form in Thomas Bernhard’s Amras
Aviv Hilbig-Bokaer
Genre Queer: Adaptation and Embodiment in Fassbinder and Ozon
Ian Fleishman
Insectum
Rose Taury