After war

In the United States – as in other places in the ambit of biomedicine – the efforts exerted on and by injured soldiers’ bodies in the aftermath of war are generally understood under the familiar medical rubric of ‘rehabilitation’. This reflection troubles that term by moving away from the medical lo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zoë H. Wool
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2016-09-01
Series:Medicine Anthropology Theory
Subjects:
war
Online Access:http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4640
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spelling doaj-8fe3324d7dbc4ed4808bef289b78544b2021-04-22T08:41:00ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryMedicine Anthropology Theory2405-691X2016-09-013210.17157/mat.3.2.4274640After warZoë H. WoolIn the United States – as in other places in the ambit of biomedicine – the efforts exerted on and by injured soldiers’ bodies in the aftermath of war are generally understood under the familiar medical rubric of ‘rehabilitation’. This reflection troubles that term by moving away from the medical logic of rehabilitation and its telos of injury and healing, and the logics that see injured soldiers as promising bodies. Instead, the think piece explores a wider range of practices of attention to injured soldiers’ bodies that emerge ethnographically, and traces embodied forms of being made within unsteady temporalities of life, health, and death after war, forms that call the temporality of rehabilitation into question and highlight care’s collateral affects. I reflect on the phenomenon of heterotopic ossification – bone growth at the site of injury that is a sign of healing that is also itself a form of injury – to think through the confounding analytical, ethical, political, and corporeal implications of such a space.http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4640soldiersinjurywarbodybiomedicinerehabilitation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zoë H. Wool
spellingShingle Zoë H. Wool
After war
Medicine Anthropology Theory
soldiers
injury
war
body
biomedicine
rehabilitation
author_facet Zoë H. Wool
author_sort Zoë H. Wool
title After war
title_short After war
title_full After war
title_fullStr After war
title_full_unstemmed After war
title_sort after war
publisher University of Edinburgh Library
series Medicine Anthropology Theory
issn 2405-691X
publishDate 2016-09-01
description In the United States – as in other places in the ambit of biomedicine – the efforts exerted on and by injured soldiers’ bodies in the aftermath of war are generally understood under the familiar medical rubric of ‘rehabilitation’. This reflection troubles that term by moving away from the medical logic of rehabilitation and its telos of injury and healing, and the logics that see injured soldiers as promising bodies. Instead, the think piece explores a wider range of practices of attention to injured soldiers’ bodies that emerge ethnographically, and traces embodied forms of being made within unsteady temporalities of life, health, and death after war, forms that call the temporality of rehabilitation into question and highlight care’s collateral affects. I reflect on the phenomenon of heterotopic ossification – bone growth at the site of injury that is a sign of healing that is also itself a form of injury – to think through the confounding analytical, ethical, political, and corporeal implications of such a space.
topic soldiers
injury
war
body
biomedicine
rehabilitation
url http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/4640
work_keys_str_mv AT zoehwool afterwar
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