<p><b>Explores the wounded body in literature from Homer to Toni Morrison examining how it functions archetypally as both a cultural metaphor and a poetic image.</b></p><p>An almost obsessive interest in the human body in literary and psychological theory over the past ten years has uncovered not just the physical body but the body as metaphor political emblem social construction and symptom. The Wounded Body builds on this recent interest in the body by providing an ambitious interdisciplinary exploration of the wounded body in literature from Homer to Toni Morrison. Guided by insights from phenomenology to Jungian archetypal psychology Dennis Slattery argues that the body in its scarred marked diseased tattooed or otherwise afflicted state is not only an individual phenomenon but in the hands of the poet a cultural symptom a place of suffering as well as a way of seeing and ordering the experience of the one who is wounded.</p>
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