Archive for December, 2009

Bodily Transplant and Survival (a few thoughts on Missed Deaths and the Fractured Self)

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

I’m going to attempt, here, some in-depth discussion about the intricacies of survival and transplants.  I hope it’s of some interest.

There is a wonderful piece of art called Transplant.   It was born of an artistic collaboration between Tim Wainwright and John Wynne (2008-2009).  I plan to interview them about it for a Static TV production early in 2010, actually (watch this space!).  The piece includes an installation, DVD, website, and book.  In audio, still image, reflective/ analytic writing, they represent – and allow the presentation of – fifty patient experiences and reflections of their transplant procedures.  Over the months of interviews, and amid the expected praise of staff dedication and expressions of satisfaction with their care, some patients expressed metaphysical ponderings and intricate descriptions of hospital machinery and the sounds with which they are constantly bombarded whilst waiting in their hospital beds for weeks, months, years.  Alongside these were recorded soundscapes of the modern ward, and essays of health-care professionals and artists.  On the DVD alone, a great variety and depth of thought is provoked: ‘I don’t feel no different [sic]‘ says one patient, while another claims that he has ‘quite a surreal existence, really’.  Watch a little longer, though, and other patients have obviously had darker thoughts about their situation: ‘it’s awful because you think: “someone else has died”.  I just try not to think about it too much.’  Towards the end of the DVD, a man, in a matter-of-fact manner, speaks his sentiments:

‘Like my father, I think, I had totally acclimatised myself to the fact that I was going to die and I’d never been frightened of dying, as a lot of people seem to be.  So I just accepted the situation… I’d caused it, it was my fault.  What a shame! I’m going to die a bit sooner than I would otherwise have done.  So, a few weeks after my operation the staff thought I was depressed and called in the psychiatrist and, in actual fact, I wasn’t depressed.  It had suddenly dawned on me that: “hang on! I’ve got so many years to live now.  What do I do now?”

It is this ‘acclimatisation’ to the inevitability of death and sudden snatching away of this moment that may open the discussion and I’d rather like some thoughts on, if I may ask such a thing! Here, though, I’m going to compare that experience to a story by the writer and philosopher Maurice Blanchot.  I say ’story’, though the word doesn’t feel appropriate:

Nazi soldiers sentenced Blanchot to death by firing squad when he was young.  He later wrote of this experience as though he did die after resigning himself to death.  That is his ’self’ died.  Obviously, his body still had something going on inside of it – it still had an ‘I’ but it wasn’t the same ‘I’ as before.  I’m going to try to argue that this experience of Blanchot’s ‘I’ being fractured (thus his identity and self no longer complete) is comparable to that of the patient I’ve just mentioned above.  Something residual is there; an ‘I’ of sorts has been constructed but he is dead.

That was in his The Instant of My Death.  And this is the story in short: upon being rounded up with his family and led outside by Nazi soldiers, a young man [as Blanchot was writing in third person] was lined up in sight of the firing squad and, encountering his last moments – or what he thought were his last moments (they were ‘his’ last moments) – Blanchot says:

‘I know – do I know it – that the one at whom the Germans were already aiming, awaiting but the final order, experienced then a feeling of extraordinary lightness, a sort of beatitude (nothing happy, however) – sovereign elation? The encounter of death with death?

(Blanchot 2000, 5).

‘The encounter of death with death’.  Very interesting.  Very chilling to consider the very moment of death being upon one! Using Derrida’s analysis helpfully included in the same volume as the story, we can surmise that this young man is Blanchot as, at the very beginning of the story, Blanchot writes: ‘I remember a young man – a man still young – prevented from dying by death itself – and perhaps the error of injustice.’ (ibid 2000, 3)  The man is still young because this is where his ‘self’ died (yet lives on in his absence) and Blanchot is writing about this instance from a position of absence (temporally displaced, if you will): a presence filled by absence; the young man is Blanchot’s self, who is ‘still young’ (lives on) yet has died in that he is only to be associated with Blanchot in the third person (a tenuous link – but still a link – to Blanchot).  The narrator is Blanchot ‘now’ or Blanchot without Blanchot; the dead Blanchot, still living; the un-dead Blanchot? He is writing in the third person to signify the death, which is possible because his (corporeal) death was prevented: there exists the same body but a different ‘I’, one that is defined by the fracture.  I think that’s followable! It’s rather difficult to communicate such a complicated process.  It is difficult to comprehend what that patient must be feeling simply because he had received something that had taken root inside of him in order to give him life.  I think it’s all the more powerful when you consider it as comparable to being in front of a firing squad.

Anyway, after preparing for death, he encountered an ‘extraordinary lightness, a sort of beatitude (nothing happy, however) – sovereign elation?’ (ibid, 5) that has similarities with the patient’s experience above.  We might paraphrase the patient from Wainwright and Wynne’s project and say that Blanchot had ‘totally acclimatised himself to the fact he was going to die’ and ‘accepted his situation’ and, upon finding that his death was to be postponed, asked himself ‘what do I do now?’ Similarly, we could say that the patient, having been led to the hospital by his diseased heart, became convinced that his death was imminent and was just ‘awaiting but the final order’ where his heart would cease beating then, when a donor became available, the threat was removed and he went hiding in ‘the dense forest’ (ibid, 5) which, for the patient, caused the psychiatrist to be called.

Indeed, the situations are different but nevertheless the same in that there is the robbing of that instant of death on both occasions: the patient had effectively been provoked into killing himself off by acclimatising to his death; Blanchot did the same.  Although the death itself remains empirically absent, there exists the trace of it having already occurred in the narrator’s questioning of the ‘encounter of death with death’ or the narrator’s utterance: ‘”I am alive.  No, you are dead”’ (ibid, 9) and the patient’s behaviour that prompted the staff to call the psychiatrist.  In another (infinitely more complex!) volume, The Writing of the Disaster, Blanchot asserts:

‘The disaster does not put me into question, but annuls the question, makes it disappear’ as if along with the question, ‘I’ too disappeared in the disaster which never appears. The fact of disappearing is, precisely, not a fact, not an event: it does not happen, not only because there is no ‘I’ to undergo the experience, but because (and this is exactly what presupposition means), since the disaster always takes place after having taken place, there cannot possibly be any experience of it.’

(Blanchot 1995, 28)

Indeed, one might say that The Instant of My Death and the patient’s experience in Wainwright and Wynne’s project are dramatisations of that.  So a successful transplant can be a disaster at the same time as a success? Of course, there are many people who had transplants who are not thinking ‘Bloody hell! I’ll have to live longer now!’ but are actually rather happy about their transplants.  I would still argue that a disaster has taken place, though, as an ‘I’ has been disrupted.  I suppose it could be akin to a city being built up again to be better and stronger after an earthquake had decimated it.

Another patient interviewed by Wainwright and Wynne for their DVD says: ‘my personality and character had gone’.  And another that she ‘emerged changed; fractured and put back together again’ (Wainwright and Wynne 2008 – 2009, 26) and both seem to resonate with Blanchot to varying degrees.  An ‘I’ is lost and identity is pieced together again.  In fact, one could go as far as to say that the new ‘I’ constructed from the fragments is other, even more significant, I think, when there is literally an other inside of oneself.  This may not necessarily negate the fact that so many patients, upon finding an extended life, find a new-found enthusiasm for life.  This is to be contrasted with Blanchot’s being ‘lost’ but both types of experience are an alteration following the initial displacement, disruption, and effective destruction of the ‘I’.

In considering these ‘displaced Is’, it is interesting to consider something I came across in an article by Lesley Sharp (1995, 372) who points out that ‘[many patients] celebrate the day of their transplant as a “second birthday” or “re-birthday” (complete with a cake shaped like the organ).’!

A little on the ‘other’ in the self: after the operation, the required immune-suppressive medication ensures that the self being ‘complete’ in any way is always in abeyance: an Other is introduced to the body, quite literally, and one is reminded about this each time one takes the medication: in a sense, the Other needs taming.  After the displacement of the ‘I’, the Other wrestles (both medically and figuratively) for space in the void opened up inside the chest.  As Blanchot writes in his 1988 essay Do Not Forget: ‘[w]e think we respect others by grudgingly leaving room for them, but others demand (without demanding) all the room’ (Blanchot 1988 in Holland 1995, 245).  In the case of bodily transplant, this seems as true inside the body as it is outside in the ‘real world’, facing ‘real’ others.

So, the question of survival is a difficult one; not just a consideration of whether one lives or dies.

I do hope that isn’t too heavy and was of some interest!

What does ‘Poetics of Transplant’ mean?

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

The best way to start these kinds of questions is with etymology, I think, and etymology is certainly needed on this occasion; it’s all in the root:

The word ‘poetics’ comes via Latin from the Greek ’poiesis’ - ‘to make’ – and is related to: ‘create’, ‘assemble’, ‘heap up’, and ‘construct’.  My over-arching aim is therefore to assemble meaning and significance…

…by looking at ‘transplant’ very closely.  There are far-reaching and complex usages of the word and although the medical use is the most common, it is the most recent.  There is a history of significance not often written about: ‘transplant’ has been used to describe the movement of people from country to country, from farm to farm, from plantation to plantation; the grafting of plants onto other plants in the hope that the graft will take root; I’ve even found early records of the transplantation of ‘Truth’ and ‘The Word’ [of God].  A few things have happened in each case:

  • A transaction has taken place
  • A repositioning has taken place
  • Something has taken root and is hoped to function (be that a plant, an organ, a person, or a religious idea)
  • Some quality has been absorbed – or that’s the intention, at least
  • …and other things that I’ve yet to uncover (any similarities you can see that might spark a burst of creativity for me, please leave in a comment!)

Excrements of the Body and Which Bits of Me Belong to Me?:

From looking at these other uses of the word and the similarities between them, I think I’ve got a workable idea of ‘transplant’ that spawns ways in which to view the process and its constituent parts.  I’m thinking about applying the points above to the thinking about the body and body parts and the meaning surrounding them at different times, in different places, by different people.  I like the notion that some quality has been absorbed, especially, and I’d rather like to look at this in more detail and in isolation from ‘transplant’ so that I can apply it again, with renewed meaning, later.  I’m not going to go into that now but instead I’ll give an example of what I’ve been thinking of quite separately from transplant but which is something that will be centrally significant when I later think about the significance that the body can be imbued with:

I really like the writing of Michel Serres, which has only just recently come to my attention.  My fantastically wonderful supervisor recommended ‘The Five Senses’ to me (which he wrote the introduction for) and, in reading the first chapter, I’ve found some wonderful descriptions of finger nails being clipped and the relationship between you and yourself (your ‘I’).  He writes many interesting things about the body being both subject and object which I intend to look at in more depth but I really like his description of the event of clipping finger nails.  Holding and manipulating the scissors, you aren’t cutting you, you’re cutting something external to you which is nevertheless from you.  Thomas Aquinas worried about such things in relation to resurrection: when you are resurrected, is your hair resurrected? Are your nails? They are, after all, just excrements from your body.  So are you resurrected bald with no teeth or nails? What happens?! Is my body mine? Which bits of me belong to me?!? Could it therefore be said that nothing belongs to me and my body isn’t sacred and no value we attach to our bodies means anything at all because it isn’t mine? How do these views on the body and how it can be viewed factor into a discussion about transplant which, after all, deals in body parts? The most obvious link here is to the teeth transplants of the 17th and 18th Century which, to my knowledge at least, is when the word ‘transplant’ was first applied to some full medical transaction.  I’ll discuss those in a later post, if there is interest, as I have a wonderful cartoon and a passage from a novel describing the sordid affair! It will make your heart bleed!

More generally, and as an aside, it is interesting how transplants could not have been possible without a general de-mythologisation of the body: the body as a mechanical device (which gives permission and confidence for someone to fiddle with someone else’s insides).  But it is also impossible without a general mythologisation of the body: one must be pressed into giving ‘the gift of life’.  At least until the time comes when a cadaver’s organs are considered ‘communal’ with the idea that one must opt out of being a donor.

The Heart I will Avoid for all but Anecdote and Allegory:

I don’t want to focus on the heart because that must be the most written about organ – and I want to avoid being banal and espousing rhetoric – but I found a play called ‘Have a Heart Mrs. Dove’ written in 1969 (a year after the first heart transplant) that I think you will find entertaining.  It is about a (presumably mad) woman whose husband is cheating on her with a beautiful young lady.  The woman, Mrs. Dove, is understandably suffering from a broken heart and, obviously rather upset, requests a heart transplant at the new ‘Barnard Heart-Transplant Hospital which does not yet exist’.  The receptionist-cum-doctor asks her what kind of heart she would like.  (Now, to give you an idea of the kinds of hearts there are available in the future, the women coming in before Mrs. Dove, asked for all kinds of hearts for her husband who she thought didn’t have a heart at all.  She asked for Casanova’s and Hercules’ hearts but they turned out to be hard to come by.  She settles for a Lion’s so she can have a somewhat spicier life with her husband).  Anyway, back to  Mrs. Dove: she had a more blood-thirsty request than the previous customer, and asked for her own heart to be replaced by that of her husband’s mistress.  The secretary-cum-doctor is shocked… because of the amount of money it would cost to hire a murderer.  To his astonishment, she puts up the cash for the murderer in the hope that he would make it ‘game over’ for her husband’s mistress so that she could have her heart and win him back.  The murder is arranged.  We hear (but never see) that the murderer misses his target (the idiot!).  In fact, in a strange twist (that no one can see coming!) the murderer is killed by the mistress.  The murderer’s heart is then transplanted into Mrs. Dove instead, who then somehow acquires an unhealthy interest in guns and, with it, an equally unhealthy interest killing her husband and his mistress.  The hospital of the future allows her to dilly dally around with her guns and go to the practice range to practice her shot (this was not the NHS, after all).  The final scene sees the husband trying to convince the wife that he hasn’t been sleeping around and she is just mistaken… but the mistress comes to the hospital after the husband calls her to make sure his ‘bit on the side’ is alright.  The play ends when the curtain drops and gun-fire is heard. BANG!

I hope I haven’t ruined anything for you there.  More seriously, though, this does highlight that there exist beliefs that certain organs are imbued with particular qualities.  The heart is just the most immediately evocative one.  Think of the hand of Dr. Strangelove.  This is why I need to look at the more obscure (and readily transplantable) body organs, parts, and members.

So, I think the first real task for me is to cast an eye on different body parts and get up to speed on the ol’ phenomenology.  You know, I found out just today that some aborigines from New Caledonia assign words to body parts depending on what they perceive to resemble that body part in their natural environment.  For example, their word for ’skin’ is the same as their word for ‘[tree] bark’.  Isn’t that interesting?  Also, in the Roman Empire, spectators used to try to eat the still-warm liver of a dead (or nearly dead) defeated gladiator believing that it would cure epilepsy.

Of course, any discussion on transplantation will touch upon identity (maybe ‘touch upon’ is an understatement) and related things like the ’self’, ‘personhood’, and the ‘I’.  This may take more of a back-seat, as it were, if I am to discuss a particular historical period but I’m not ruling it out just yet (and for professionalism, I think I ought to know about it and make it relevant to the contemporary!).  I’ll also post some bits and bats over the coming weeks about the link between transplantation and survival if there is sufficient interest.  Sufficient interest would be one person being interested!

All this from simply repositioning something! It’s a very special process and you can hopefully see why it excites me.

End:

It is one of my intentions to think about the beginnings of the use of the word in medicine and how the things such as those mentioned above might colour the meaning.  So, although I am yet to officially limit my work to a date, it looks like the task ahead needs truncating and discussing a particular time period may prove fruitful.  That will probably be around the 17th and 18th Century mark.  Still, I’m not ready to do that yet so, for now, I’ll just be scrutinising some body parts!

I’m claiming no voice of authority here, really, as I’m exploring my subject’s scope and would really love any feedback or comments or suggestions.  They would be very much appreciated  I’ll try to do similar for those of you on the social space who have similar blogs (if you like!) as, really, in discussion, I think much progress can be made!

I hope you have enjoyed reading this!

About Me!

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Hello Multi-and-Inter-Disciplinary Research Community!

Following the trend, I thought that I would develop a blog.  I have never done this before but I suppose it should be started by introducing and contextualising the academic ‘me’ broadly: In 2006, I achieved a First Class BA (hons) in Music but was dissatisfied with the limits of the field, as music never happens inside of a vacuum.  I wanted some way to work with sound and its context so did an MA (by Research) in Performing Arts.  After my MA, I worked as a Research Assistant with the NHS and became interested in hospitals and medical establishments and what happens in them.  My PhD with the London Consortium is where the two ‘creative’ and ‘medical’ strands of my life converge.  It is a multi-disciplinary venture, looking at the Poetics of Transplant.

Just what ‘the Poetics of Transplant’ are I’m going to try to explore a little in this blog…