Posts Tagged ‘self’

Alice in Wonderland and Tooth Worms Including Pictures!

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

Dear Friends,

I have hit a problem with the filming of the LitSciMed film: 5 minutes is too little time to do what I wanted to do originally.  However, the film will still go ahead but I’ve had to re-structure it quite a bit and re-frame the subject so that the film occupies 5 minutes rather than being squeezed into it; when a boxer sweats, s/he is weak – much better to lop off bits and save them for another day.

I couldn’t wait for another day, though, so I’ve written and expanded upon the information that I prepared to put into the first part of the film and  I would like to offer some thoughts about the general significance of the teeth but, rather than merely listing the functions of the teeth, I would like to offer a phenomenological account or texture of them and suggest some ways in which teeth and their loss have been, and might be, experienced.  This is an example of how I have come to love English Literature being precursory to any scientific or medical discussion (which forms ‘Part 2′, already written but if I posted it, would give away my film!) I don’t think I could write things like this and get away with them if it wasn’t for things like LitSciMed.  I do hope you enjoy it!

Part 1: the General Significance and Experience of Teeth


Image 1: Carroll 1866/2000, 93

Image 1: Carroll 1866/2000, 93


‘[...] I wish you wouldn’t keep appearing and vanishing so suddenly: you make one quite giddy.’

‘All right,’ said the Cat; and this time it vanished quite slowly, beginning with the end of the tail, and ending with the grin, which remained some time after the rest of it had gone. |

‘Well! I’ve often seen a cat without a grin,’ thought Alice; ‘but a grin without a cat! It’s the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!’

(Carroll 1866/2000, 93-94)

As a child, I watched Disney’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.  I remember most vividly the scene adapted from the above exchange in which the Cheshire Cat disappears slowly.  I recall a purple, striped, fat cat perched on the bough of a tree, innately grinning; the pupils of his eyes bobbing around, his straight teeth a glistening white – as Carroll illustrates: ‘grinning from ear to ear’ (Carroll ibid, 82).  The smile distinguished the Cat and announced his presence.  In fact, later in the tale, Alice spots a disembodied grin at the Queen’s tea party, immediately recognising: ‘it’s the Cheshire Cat: now I shall have somebody to talk to.’ (Carroll 1866/2000, 123)

The smile, here, is detachable from the rest of the body, which perhaps is not as far-fetched as Caroll’s fantasy might suggest.  It has always been the case that those constituent ingredients of the grin or smile, the teeth, fall out once early in life and again with the onset of old age, disease, or accident.  One might also recall false teeth with heads absent, chasing cartoon cats and dogs around, or the permanently grinning false teeth in a jar of fluid perched on the side of an elderly person’s night-table.  The teeth or the smile introduce one’s face – and this is literally the case for beings such as the Cheshire Cat.  But the teeth’s peculiar nature as commonly detachable from the living body, naturally and unnaturally, has afforded a distinct experience of them.  Not uncommonly, the loss is preceded by a particular quality of pain which is well presented by Tupper, who offers this tender account:

A raging throbbing tooth,—it burns, it burns!
Darting its fiery fibres to the brain,
A stalk of fever on a root of pain,
A red-hot coal, a dull sore cork by turns,
A poison, kindred to the viper’s fang,
Galling and fretting: ha! it stings again,
Riving the sensitive nerve with keenest pang [...]

(Tupper 1860/1992, 59)

Here, the quality is pointy, dull, pulsating, and persistent; throbbing, burning, and puncturing imagery dominate the entire stanza.  In fact, a German saying considers the only pain worse than toothache as being in love but being unable to marry.  Unmarried girls who complain of pain in their teeth are said to be teased cruelly about this: ‘[i]t is true that toothache is something horrible, but never mind, being without a husband is still worse than this’ (Kanner 1928, 102).  Perhaps these two pangs can be read as metaphors for each other.  Further, a rotten tooth has been compared with a rotten husband; both bringing equal pain.  In Davners’ 1859 comic play, A Conjugal Lesson, a wife suffering with a violent and philandering husband curses her husband and her equally lamentable toothache:

It’s so unfeeling, when he knows this horrid toothache has been distracting me this two days. A bad toothache and a bad husband! I don’t know which is the greatest torment (in Steele 1859/2003, 179)

Image 2: Kanner 1929, 106

Image 2: Kanner 1929, 106

Over time, various monsters have been held responsible for tooth ache.  Remarkably, these images of tooth ache monsters by far most often resemble serpents or worms.  The extraordinary and tiny Tooth Worm has been held accountable for the tooth-related maladies for thousands of years. Kanner presents us with an image of Bitoso the Fasting, the ‘tooth ache demon’ of the Bosnian Gypsies (see image 2) who is one of nine demon-children of Anna the fairy queen and the dwarf King Locolica and ‘the least harmful [demon] of all’. (Kanner 1931, 517) Compare this with the locket crafted in the vastly different cultural climate of the South of France around 1780, presented on the frontispiece of an Illustrated History of Dentistry. (Ring 1985, 2, 28 – see image 3) Incidentally, the Tooth Worm depiction in image 3 is reminiscent of a medieval depiction of hell.  B R Townsend, in 1944, noted that the earliest evidence he found of tooth worms occurs on a papyrus of the 20th dynasty of Egypt, circa 1,200-1,100 BC in which is described an official stationed at a desert out-post who complains of various diseases and laments that ‘the worm gnaweth at his teeth.’ (Townsend 1944, 37) Elsewhere, Ring indicates clay tablet in Babylonia offering the following story, effectively associating the tooth worm as being created equally by earthly and heavenly circumstances:

After Anu [had created heaven]…

The earth had created the rivers,

The rivers had created the canals,

The canals had created the marsh,

The marsh had created the worm.

The worm went weeping, before Shamash,

His tears flowing before Ea:

‘What wilt thou give me for my sucking?’

‘I shall give thee the ripe fig and the apricot.’

‘Of what use are they to me, the ripe fig and the apricot?

Lift me up and among the teeth

And the gums cause me to dwell!

The blood of the tooth will I suck,

And of the gum will I gnaw the roots!’

(Ring 1985, 28; see also a variation in Kanner 1931, 518)

Image 3: Ring 1985, 2

Image 3: Ring 1985, 2

The native word for ‘toothache’ in Madagascar means ‘poorly through the worm’ (Townsend 1944, 42) and the Cherokee Indians declare the cause of toothache to be ‘a mere worm that has wrapped itself round the base of the tooth.’ (ibid, 43) Around the year 1700, the tooth worm theories began to lose scientific credibility when operators on the teeth such as Fauchard repeatedly failed to find worms in their researches and, even if they are occasionally found, Fauchard declared, they ‘can have little part in the causation of toothache or dental decay.’ (ibid, 45) However, as the locket of image 3 suggests, the imagery persisted.

Of course, the Gods have been more widely and generally held responsible for tooth ache or otherwise for affecting its cure.  The Japanese, for instance, have a God, Agonashi-Jizo (literally, Jizo who has no jaw), who tore off his own jaw from his face and threw it away because of tooth ache.  It is said that people pray to him hoping to rid themselves of their toothache. (Kanner 1931, 509) And, in Christianity, there is a patron saint of toothache and dentistry – Apollonia – and invocation of her name is supposed to bring immediate relief. (ibid, 512)  There are prayers alluding to St. Peter’s toothache, which the Lord cured.  Sometimes, St. Peter is replaced by other saints or the Virgin Mary.  Kanner gives on Devonshire version of the charm:

All Glory! All glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost.  As our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ was walking in the garden of Gethsemane, He saw Peter weeping.  He called him unto Him, and said: ‘Lord, I am grievously tormented with pain, the pain of my tooth.’  Our Lord answered and said: ‘If thou wilt believe in Me, and My words abide with thee, thou shalt never feel any more pain in thy tooth.’ Peter said: ‘Lord, I believe; help thou my unbelief.’ God grant ease from pain in the teeth. (ibid, 511)

The importance of pain to the experience of teeth is also elucidated in Hood’s A True Story, which compliments Tupper’s account, though this time introducing a second character to interrupt the pain: the dentist.  In the following two stanzas, one might identify two broad types of pain associated with the loss of teeth: physical, and emotional.

It had an universal sting;

One touch of that ecstatic stump

Could jerk his limbs, and make him jump

Just like a puppet on a string;

And what was worse than all, it had

A way of making others bad.

There is, as many know, a knack,

With certain farming undertakers,

And this same tooth pursued their track,

By adding achers still to achers!

When his old tooth began to break

The thread of old associations;

It touch’d a string in every part,

It had so many tender ties;

One chord [sic] seem’d wrenching at his heart,

And two were tugging at his eyes:

“Bone of his Bone” he felt of course,

As husbands do in such divorce

(Hood 1862-3/1992, 309-310, Hood’s emphasis)

Hood’s imagery provides a dreadfully vivid account of the teeth in pain; the quality of pain so palpable that one can almost feel the ‘ecstatic stump’ that causes the patient so much hassle; and the ability that pain has to infect adjacent teeth, adding ‘achers still to achers’.  When the dentist begins his extraction in the second stanza, the quality of the pain develops into a more intricate and excruciating one: the tender ties break one-by-one as the tooth begins to crack and become dislodged, giving way to a different quality of pain – no longer aching, dull, or sensitive but instead a more piercing breaking of ‘tender ties’ and ‘old associations’.  After a painful ordeal, the tooth is finally out, which presumably puts an end to the patient’s physical pain.  The ‘tender ties’ and ‘old associations’ have dual meanings, however, and the patient’s pain does not stop at the tooth’s removal: the patient suffers a ‘divorce’.  Indeed, ‘tender ties’ and ‘old associations’ denote an uneasy emotional upheaval.  As this suggests, the teeth are part of a thinking, feeling human, and a furnished, sensing mouth.  Teeth fall out and grow back (once).  They are considered external to the body, yet pain from them marks a good proportion of one’s life.  They are central to health, yet once beneath medical men who would, as Wendy Moore puts it, have no problem sticking an enema up someone’s backside but could never bring themselves to delve into someone’s stinking mouth (Moore 2005, 152).  They are essential, yet extractable; they easily rot, yet are used as a last resort as the most durable items with which to identify a body; they are interior, yet exterior; at the margins of the body, they are disposable yet hold the mouth in shape.  Taking the tongue as a focus of sensation, one might explore the landscape of one’s own mouth.  One’s teeth are the mouth’s furniture and, just as if something changes about a familiar room, if something changes about one’s teeth, it is noticed.  Any change to this landscape close to where, in European thought, one is (in the head) is in some sense unsettling.  This is why having a tooth removed or a filling put in makes one’s mouth feel alien for a while until it becomes usual; until the wounds of the dental divorce heal.  Perhaps this is also why any severity of pain in the mouth is distracting and why Shakespeare, in Much Ado About Nothing, knows of no philosopher who can abide tooth ache.

‘I pray thee peace, I will be flesh and bloud,
For there was neuer yet Philosopher,
That could endure the tooth-ake patiently,
How euer they haue writ the stile of gods,
And made a push at chance and sufferance.

(Shakespeare 1623/1994, 117)

A tooth ache might be merely a constantly presence, just present enough to demand attention, and an alteration to how one perceives oneself.  A pain in the mouth of any kind is distracting and a permanent unsettling.

Teeth have magical qualities, too, particularly for ‘country people’.  In Forster’s Howard’s End, Ruth Wilcox, the soon-to-be-dead wife of Henry Wilcox and then owner of Howard’s end, begins to strike up a friendship with Margaret Schlegel, telling her about a wych-elm at the bottom of the garden:

‘The wych-elm I remember.  Helen spoke of it as a very splendid tree.’

‘It is the finest wych-elm tree in Hertfordshire.  Did your sister tell you about the teeth?’

‘No.’

‘Oh, it might interest you.  There are pig’s teeth stuck into the trunk, about four feet from the ground.  The country people put them in long ago, and they think that if they chew a piece of the bark it will cure the toothache.  The teeth are almost grown over now, and no one comes to the tree.’

‘I should.  I love folklore and all festering superstitions’

‘Do you think that the tree really did cure toothache, if one believed in it?’

‘Of course it did.  It would cure anything – once.’

(Forster 1910/1973, 69)

Ultra-sensible and straight-laced Henry Wilcox, when Margaret asks him about the teeth declares it a ‘rum notion!’ (ibid 186) but he is surprised when he experiences them later (ibid 204).  One particularly hellish quality of toothache in folklore is that it seems never able to be destroyed.  Perhaps this is because the teeth are also made of extraordinarily hardy stuff.  In any case, the persistence and quality of the pain is such that it only ever seems to be transferable.  And methods, charms, spells, and chants abound that promise such a transfer or flushing away from and out of the body.  The Tooth Worm must only be able to wriggle from one object to another – in the case in Forster’s novel, from the tooth to the tree.  It is this hope of getting rid of the pain and the measures individuals will take that speaks of this aspect of their significance.  In fact, such a transferral of pain from tooth to bark is a well-travelled folk remedy with versions all over the world.  Carter and Carter report that ‘driving shed teeth into a tree to prevent toothache has been reported from North Carolina [...] and Illinois [...]’. (Carter and Carter 1990, 13) Also, in Bavaria, reports Leo Kanner, ‘the bark is carefully loosened in springtime from a young elder or willow on that side of the tree which is directed toward sunrise.  A small splinter is cut out from the wood, with which the gums are poked until they bleed, and the splinter is refastened to the trunk and covered by the bark, which is tied or glued to the tree’ (Kanner 1928, 181).  And in the ‘Province of Brandenburg’, a nail is used in place of a splinter and, as long as the tree with the nail in it exists, it will retain the pain of the tooth and the individual will be free from tooth ache (ibid, 184).  A more elaborate remedy, again from Brandenburg, promises that if you are to be free from tooth ache, ‘[y]ou cut first the nails of the left foot, beginning from the little toe and proceeding to the big toe, then the nails of the right hand from the little finger toward the thumb; the same is done to the right foot and to the left hand in the same order.  At each nail you say: “In the name of God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.”  Then you ask somebody for a quill, put the twenty clippings into it, go to a tree, make a hole in the tree and put the clippings in this.  The hole should be closed in the name of God, etc’ (ibid, 193).  Kanner mentions tens of similar remedies involving trees and many more involving the transfer of pain involving animals and other objects.  It is striking how so many tooth remedies feature a tree in them somewhere and usually as something into which pain is transferred.  It is tempting to imagine the pain being dispersed into the rest of nature as a living force: a harbinger of the vital force John Hunter so strongly believed ran through every living thing, prompting his experiments in tooth transplantation – more of which later.

It is not exclusively trees to which pain gets transferred.  A similar hope of relief is referred to in this piece by Egerton-Warburton, which refers to a belief that a tooth can ache independent of the body – in this case, the tooth aches in the basin:

‘”Why you should suffer so much pain
I cannot tell,” said little Jane,
A visitor embracing:
“Out from your mouth why don’t you take
Your teeth at once, and let them ache,
As Ma does,—in a basin?”

(Egerton-Warburton 1877, 104)

This might be seen as stemming from homeopathic magic, whereby something can affect something else by virtue of being physically associated with it.  It is perhaps this logic that allows rats, mice, and other animals with reputedly strong teeth to play their part in remedies.  Incidentally, a few cures for toothache involve earth or other worms, which would appear to be based on sympathetic magic when one considers the prevalence of the tooth worm myth. (Townsend 1944, 46). Animals and teeth (and animal teeth) are closely related in folk lore and are favourite candidates from which to obtain dental strength or, conversely, from which to hide shed teeth to obviate undesirable qualities sprouting in the mouth in the future.  For instance, it is said that teeth were burned in Europe, the USA, and by the North American Indians so that the tooth would not be swallowed by an animal, as, if swallowed, the soon-to-erupt tooth would look like the animal’s tooth ‘especially a dog’s tooth or a pig’s tooth’’ (Carter and Carter 1990, 1).  In Utah, North Carolina, Illinois, and Texas, ‘southern Blacks buried their teeth under rocks to keep dogs from stepping on them, otherwise a dog’s tooth would grow in place of the lost tooth (ibid, 3).  And in Saudi Arabia, ‘some children throw their shed teeth to the sun, saying “Take my donkey tooth [a large, ugly tooth] and give me the tooth a gazelle [a smaller tooth]”’ and, similarly, in Libya, Iraq, and Jordan there exist similar phrases: ‘Take the tooth of a cow and give me the tooth of a bride’ or ‘Sun, take this tooth of a donkey and give me the tooth of a gazelle’ (ibid, 11).  When some African kings or chiefs die, their subjects crowd around their corpses and tear out their teeth and hair which is supposed allow the rain to fall, and when the king of a particular tribe in Angola dies, his teeth are extracted by an official, and presented to his successor, who then keeps it in a box with the teeth of the former kings.  This is the property of the crown and, without which, no monarch can rule. (Kanner 1931, 514)

According to Carter and Carter, ‘[m]ice have been especially popular in European shed tooth rituals because of their strong, sharp teeth, and perhaps also because they symbolize growth and fertility’ (Carter and Carter 1990, 15).  One example of these mouse rituals is this one from France in which a child offers its tooth to a mouse, saying the words:

‘Little mouse, here is my tooth, give me again a prettier tooth’ (ibid, 17)

In Armenia, it was believed that ancestral spirits occupied the specific mice that lived near a hearth.  The teeth were therefore offered to those mice in particular (Ibid, 16).  And many instances of similar charms involving mice – with very similar wordings, sometimes substituting categories of prettiness with those of strength – appear around the world.  For American Indians the mouse is swapped for a similarly strong-toothed animal: the beaver (ibid, 20).  Other traditions throw teeth to birds and hope they will bring them stronger ones. (ibid 16-17) Kanner provides elaborate and striking examples:

To be cured from toothache, bite off the head of a living mouse and suspend it from the neck, but beware of making a knot in the thread or in the ribbon upon which it is suspended.  One always has good teeth after eating from the bread which was gnawed by a mouse, and particularly the very place which shows the notches from the animal’s teeth (Kanner 1928, 141)

In this case, the strength of the mouse’s teeth is said to imbue the teeth of the one who eats the bread or bites off the mouse’s head.  In a later publication in Medical Life, Kanner recounts stories where ‘some of the personages dealt with in the bible’ are imbued with strong or hairy teeth: Jacob promised Judah teeth ‘whiter than milk’ and, according to Talmudic tradition, his teeth became so strong that he could crush iron plates into powder.  Jacob’s brother, on the other hand, who has been characterised as a less savoury character, is said to have had teeth covered with hair.’ (Kanner 1931, 509-510) There thus appears to be two types of folk lore concerning teeth and animals.  The first, as with the hiding of the tooth or somehow moving the tooth out of range of an animal with ugly teeth such as a dog; and the second, as with the hoping of a tooth like a gazelle or, by far more commonly, of the mice.  In both of these instances, the quality of the tooth and its transference is important.  Whether an individual wants to avoid becoming ugly or, in contrast, wants to have strong teeth free from tooth ache, the behaviour recognises a transfer of characteristics.

Although there are no recorded instances of the actual transplantation of animal teeth into the human body, as far as I am aware, it most probably did occur, and was in fact recommended by an ‘operator for the teeth’ Charles Allen, who insisted that transplanting teeth between two humans was ‘too Inhumane, and attended with too many Difficulties’ (Allen 1685, 11) but championed animal-human transplantation – at least as an idea.  He recommended having a stock of ‘brutes’ such as dogs, sheep, goats and baboons (ibid, 11-12) and suggested choosing ‘an Animal whose Teeth should come nearest to those of the Patient [...] and having tied his legs together, [...] fasten his head in some convenient place, so that he might not stir in the least, and by some proper means keep his mouth open’ (ibid, 12).  When drawing an animal’s tooth, the operator should leave ‘a very little portion of the Gums about it, and then having used the same circumspection, in dividing the Patient’s Tooth from the Gums, and the Jaw-bone [...] draw it forth, and put immediately in its place that of the Brute; fastening it very well and straight between the other Teeth’ (ibid).  Here, the teeth of animals are proposed as substitutes for human teeth; merely functional replacement (it is doubtful that one would choose the tooth of a dog, sheep, goat, or baboon with which to beautify oneself with!)

Much of this thought about teeth and the experience of them persists.  However, events of the 18th century shifted – or added to – this significance making it peculiar to this period (and sometimes lingering beyond).  It is to this that I turn my attention in part 2… the film and another piece of writing that I’ll submit after the film!

I hope that you’ve enjoyed reading this little piece and will look forward to seeing some of you soon!

All my best,

Paul.

List of Works Cited:

Allen, Charles (1685), The Operator for the Teeth, York: John White.

Carroll, Lewis (1866/2000), Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll with Forty-two Illustrations by John Tenniel, London: Macmillan and Co.

Carter, Joseph G, and Carter William J (1990), Of Mice and Tooth Fairies: Shed Tooth Customs from Around the World, North Carolina: Chapel Hill.

Egerton-Warburton, Rowland Eyles (1877), ‘Cure for Toothache’ from Poems, Epigrams and Sonnets, London: Basil Montagu Pickering, pp104.

Forster, Edward Morgan. (1910/1973), Howard’s End, London: Edward Arnold.

Hood, Thomas (1862-3/1992), ‘A True Story’ in The Works of Thomas Hood, Comic and Serious: in Prose and Verse, Edited with Notes by his Son, London: Edward Moxon & Co., 308-315

Kanner, Leo (1928), Folk Lore of the Teeth, New York: The Macmillan Company.

Kanner, Leo (1931), ‘The Teeth of Gods, Saints, and Kings: Hythologies and Historical Contributions to Dental Folklore’, in Medical Life, no. 38, 507 – 520

Moore, Wendy (2005), The Knife Man: The Extraordinary Life and Times of John Hunter, Father of Modern Surgery, London: Bantam Press.

Ring, Malvin E (1985), Dentistry: An Illustrated History, New York: Harry N. Abrams, inc.

Shakespeare, William (1623/1994), ‘Much Adoe about Nothing’ in, Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies. Published according to the True Originall Copies, London: Isaac Iaggard, and Ed. Blount.

Steele, Silas Sexton (1859/2003), A Conjugal Lesson: A Comic Play, in One Act and One Scene. By H. Danvers [in, Book of Plays for Home Amusement, being a Collection of Original, Altered and Selected Tragedies, Plays, Dramas, Comedies, Farces, Burlesques, Charades, Lectures, Etc., Carefully Arranged and Specially Adapted for Private Representation with Full Directions For Performance], Philadelphia: George G. Evan.

Townsend, B R (1944), ‘The Story of the Tooth-Worm’ in Bulletin of the History of Medicine, vol. 15, no.1 (January 1944), Maryland: the John Hopkins Press, pp37 – 58

Tupper, Martin Farquhar (1860/1992), ‘Toothache’ in Three Hundred Sonnets, London: Arthur Hall, Virtue, and Co., 59.

Bodily Resurrection and Food 2: Food and the Dead Body

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Dear Friends,

This week has been a slightly odd week for research.  I’ve been writing more than I’ve written without writer’s block.  I hope this stream of words coming from my pen (yes, I still use pen and paper, what of it, tough guy?) doesn’t stop.  I put it down to a new item of food I have been having for lunch.  There’s a lovely lovely place outside of Euston station that sells something called ’shraps’ and they’re like larger portions of sushi but more filling.  I’ve been feeling fantastic in the two days since I’ve had them!  Anyway…

Here is the second instalment of some of my thinking on food and the dead body to follow up the last post on the living body.  To remind you, the question I aimed to address was: Have Ideas on Food and Eating Influenced Understanding of the Corporeal Resurrection Body, Particularly in Relation to 1 Corinthians 15:42-44? and, also to remind you, the passage in question is:

‘It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption: It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power.  It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body.  There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body’ (1 Corinthians 15: 42-44, King James Version)

And now…

Food and the Dead Body:

Christ as Food:

I have not indulged in the debates about the Last Supper, as might be expected here.  The debate on the meaning of the unleavened bread, for example, and even the disputes that the bread is unleavened in the first place I have found ultimately irrelevant, if very interesting.  Indeed, there are also well-trodden sets of arguments, I have come to discover, that surround the various meanings of Christ’s blood.  These intricacies are all very fascinating but it is the notion of Christ’s body being food that interests me.

Food and the dead body in both the Last Supper and the resurrection perverts the usual relationship between food and the body.  Whereas it is usually the body that takes the food, the body now is the food.  A consumed body demonstrates an interesting relationship and complicated passage between the living and the dead, and the corruptible and the incorruptible.  The ownership of the body is placed into question, for example, when one eats another’s body.  Also, it would seem that two bodies cannot occupy the same space and this must have implications for the resurrection, if material continuity and a concept of identity are to be integral.

Apart from accounts of the Last Supper and the symbols of bread and wine as Christ’s body and blood, the idea of Christ’s body as food seems to have been prevalent in medieval theory and particularly in painting.  One such painting, from the studio of Freidrich Herlin, painted Christ with Ears of Wheat and Grape Vine.

Freidrich Herlin School

Bynum, in Fragmentation and Redemption writes on this in a chapter about conceptions of the body of Christ in the middle ages.  She points out that the female was seen to be the provider of the food and many medieval assumptions linked woman and flesh to the body of God (Bynum 1991, 100, 101).  Bynum concludes by saying that ‘Holy women imitated Christ in their bodies [most stigmatics were women]; and Christ’s similar bleeding and feeding body was understood as analogous to theirs (ibid 104).  Robin Campin’s Madonna and Child before a Firescreen (below) depicts Mary offering both her breast and son to the viewer (ibid).  Here, both the woman and Christ are offered as food, linking both birth (through implicating Mary) and death to food and the process of eating.

capinRobbert1430NatGal

An interesting passage to bring to bear upon this is 1 Corinthians 12:27: ‘Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular’.  Not only is the bread and wine Christ’s body and blood, it is the Christian body and blood by extension.  Further, Vine insists that the passage in the pre-translation bible lacks a definite article thereby placing different emphasis upon the relationship between Christ and His followers: ‘[t]he proper rendering is “ye are body of Christ” (not ye are Christ’s body, which puts emphasis on “Christ”), that is to say “body of Christ” is the quality or condition of the assembly as a whole of which each individual forms a member.’ (Vine 1951, 175-176) This is also reflected in Paul: ‘we being many are one bread, and one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread.’ (1 Corinthians 10: 17) In her From Feasting to Fasting, Grimm renders this relationship from Paul’s view as ‘participation in “the body of Christ”’ (Grimm 1996, 67) Further, Hodgeson notes that, with this gesture, the body of every believer is a member of Christ and it must therefore follow that ‘”flesh and blood” have entered the kingdom, and are now in the present life.’ (Hodgeson 1853, 24) Furthermore, Tertullian asserts that ‘the flesh feeds on the Body and Blood of Christ so that the soul also may be replete with God’ (reproduced with commentary in Evans 1960, 25).

Cannibalism:

Hodgson worried, in his text about the resurrection, that ‘more than thrice seven years ago an European was eaten up by a company of cannibals in a distant island, and when we reflect that the substance of his body became, by assimilation, incorporated with theirs; and supposing that those cannibals died before they had thrown off the particles of matter acquired from his body, would not one man be entirely lost from the universe for ever?’ (Hodgeson 1853, 54) This concern has long stood and Aquinas also voiced (and dealt with) it:

There are to be found men who eat human flesh and nothing else; and men thus nourished have children.  Consequently the same flesh will be in several men.  But it cannot possibly rise again in several men: and yet the resurrection would surely not be universal and entire, if each one did not regain what he had before.  Therefore it would seem impossible that men will rise again.’ (Aquinas 1927, 273)

The above quotation is from Summa contra Gentiles.  This work is referred to in John Candlish’s article, St. Thomas Aquinas and the Dynamic State of Body Constituents.  Candlish points out that Summa contra Gentiles was Aquinas’ ‘reference work for missionaries [who were] obliged to deal with the concept of the resurrection and the theoretical difficulties which might be raised by it.’ (Candlish 1968, 272) This refers to an objection that Aquinas later deals with by explaining that the assumption that ‘identity [...] depends on continuity’ is ‘based on a false premise’ – that of being is ‘not merely adherent to matter and the soul’s being [...] remains after the dissolution of the body’ (Aquinas 1927, 277).  The identity of the risen body has therefore been a key concern in the resurrection of the body, as it has been thought that bodily continuity is integral to the resurrection; Christians want not only a body back after death, they want their own body.  Aquinas addresses some fears of the missionaries: ‘the flesh consumed will rise again in the man in whom it was first perfected by a rational soul’ (Aquinas 1927, 278).  He continues to be concerned for those potential savage converts and their families who may have not eaten anything but other people!

‘the second man – if he partook of other food besides human flesh – will rise again with only such matter as he acquired from this other food, and in such quantity as is required from this other food [...].  But if he partake of no other food, he will rise again with what he received from his parents, and the deficiency will be supplied by the omnipotence of his Creator.  And if his parents also partook of none but human meat, so that this seed would also be engendered therefrom, their children will rise again with that seed, and he whose flesh was consumed will be supplied from another source.’ (ibid, 278-279)

This rather elaborate explanation will allow for those who have had their own flesh eaten to regain that flesh and for the cannibal to be resurrected too, in theory. Graham, in contrast, worries that if you have ‘eaten swine’, part of you ‘has once wallowed like a hog in the mire’ (Graham 1783, 7) and that part of you is forever a part of you – relating to the earlier segment of the discussion about food and the living body.  Identity is central here, too.  Indeed, the corporeal fate of those eaten by savages seems to be that one becomes part of the savage, quite literally becoming what you eat (possible title here that you will like, Sharon: ‘You are what you eat!’) Aquinas, however, obviates such fears and advises that ’there is no need that whatever was in man materially should rise again in him; and that if anything be lacking, it can be supplied by God’s power.’ (Aquinas 1927, 278)

The above interpretations rely on the idea of individual identity persisting through the passage from corruptible to incorruptible and place physical continuity at the heart of that.  Theophilus of Antioch (unknown – c183) associates this material continuity with bones, which did not appear to decay.  Cannibalism is a crucial issue for him. (Bynum 1995, 31)  The bone, then, would seem to act as the seed from which one could sprout a heavenly, incorruptible body on the day of judgement.

As an aside concerning identity, there have arisen questions of what might be called the liminal body parts – hair, teeth, nails et cetera and whether, having no use after the resurrection, would they be resurrected? This question has been asked of all body parts but seem particularly pertinent for these liminal parts, as they continuously grow and it would be unseemly for all of the matter ever grown to be re-united with the body.  Aquinas, as always, has an answer in the supplement to his Summa Theologica when discussing ‘The integrity of the bodies in the resurrection’.  He identifies two ‘perfections’: the first being those parts that are ‘directed to the accomplishment of the souls’ operations, for instance the heart, liver, hand, foot’ and the second being those ‘directed to the safe keeping of other parts as leaves to cover fruit; thus hair and nails are in man for the protection of other parts’ and, he says, all parts will rise again for the purpose of identity (Aquinas 1947, Part 3, supplement, qu80:2).  So, for Aquinas, identity is re-established after death.

Bynum states that the question of individual identity had not been raised in philosophy of the period of Paul (Bynum 1995, 25) and so identifying oneself as an individual seems not to have been an issue to him but something read into his text by later theologians like Aquinas and Graham.  To contrast with this concern of identity that Aquinas and others worry about, I would like to draw upon Clement of Rome’s (unknown – c100) version of the story of the Phoenix, bringing to bear the body as food.  To later Authors, as Bynum points out, it is important that the same bird rises.  To Clement, however, bodily continuity does not seem particularly important:

‘the bird dies; its flesh decays; a worm or larva is born from this putrefying flesh and feeds on it.  Eventually the worm grows wings and flies to the altar of its triumph carrying the bones of the old bird, now stripped clean.’ (in Bynum 1995, 25)

The condition of the dead body is actually complicated further by Graham, who likens the corruptible body to ‘grass’.  Graham refers to the Hebrew word used in the original scripture: ‘whatever is newly sprung up and sprouteth out of the ground’ (Graham 1783, 5) – for other uses, see Genesis 1:11, ‘Let the earth bring forth grass’; Matthew 6:30, ‘God so clothe the grass of the field’.  It is interesting how under this interpretation, the body is treated as being fundamentally similar to things that are edible; prepared for the journey inside – at least for the purposes of resurrection.  By this logic, one can be eaten and be still of a stuff that can be raised; the pre-resurrection body and food are essentially of the same ilk.

‘What man who believes in a resurrection would offer himself as a tomb for bodies destined to arise?’ (Athenagoras 1972, 86)

Identity seems central to Athenagoras too, who argues that a human being cannot be said to exist when scattered and dissolved, even if the soul survives.  The restoration of a soul to its original body is what defines resurrection (Athenagoras 1972, 146).  In contrast to this and as a note on continuity, Aquinas points out the metaphor of a fire: the fire that burns when the logs have disappeared and new ones put on is still the same fire (Aquinas 1927, 278).

Tertullian also sees resurrection as re-assemblage of bits: ‘So then the flesh will rise again, all of it indeed, itself, entire.  Wherever it is, it is on deposit with God through the faithful trustee of God and men, Jesus Christ, who will pay back both God to man and man to God, spirit to flesh and flesh to spirit.’ (reproduced with commentary in Evans 1960, 184-185) Thus we rise “whole” [...] like a damaged and repaired ship whose parts are restored though some of the planks are new. (Bynum 1995, 37)

Thinking about the stomach as a tomb and being resurrected from it, Ignatius, in his Epistle to the Romans (around year 100), proclaims himself ‘the wheat of God; and I shall be ground by the teeth of the wild beasts, that I may be found the pure bread of Christ.’ (in Bickersteth 1838, 75-76).  He is to be executed and thrown to the lions.  He taunts his executioners: ‘Let breaking of bones and tearing of members; let the shattering in pieces of the whole body, and all the wicked torments of the devil come upon me; and only let me enjoy Jesus Christ’ (ibid, 76).  No matter what the lions do to him, even if they grind him into dust, he will be raised because God will piece him together again.  For Ignatius, not even material continuity of bones is needed.  So, it appears that under some interpretations, complete digestion is still not an obstacle to resurrection; digestion is interpreted as a transition, not as annihilation, as particles can be placed together by the power of God.

Afterthought:

There seems to be sibling understandings of purity in eating and purity in the raised body.  Through controlling beastly passions, one can prepare for resurrection.  The dead body being food is something that allows the resurrection to be understood through bodily margins and conceptions of purity.  But it also complicates it.  By considering cannibalism, and even Christ as food is a form of cannibalism, one is forced into increasingly inventive and elaborate explanations.

It appears as though food is indeed essential to understanding the body in 1 Corinthians 15:42-44.  If one understands that the corporeal body is usually, but not always, defined by a concept of identity and continuity, it appears that the act of eating and the image of the body as food is analogous to that of resurrection or a transition between bodies.  Following the passage between corruptible and incorruptible is as if following a passage of outside to inside; impurity to purity.

List of Works Cited:

Athenagoras of Athens (1972) Legatio and De Resurrectione, trans. Schoedel, William R., Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Aquinas, Thomas (1923), Summa contra Gentiles, Trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province, London: Burns Oates & Washbourne ltd.

Aquinas, Thomas (1947), Summa Theologica, Trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province, New York: Benziger Bros. Online at <http://www.ccel.org/ccel/aquinas/summa.toc.html>

Bickersteth, E (1838), The Christian Fathers of the First and Second Centuries, London: R.B. Seeley and W. Burnside

Bynum, Caroline Walker (1991), Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion, New York: Zone Books.

Bynum, Caroline Walker (1995), The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christianity, 200-1336, New York: Columbia University Press.

Campin, Robert (1430), The Virgin and Child Before a Firescreen, London: National Gallery.  Online at <http://www.museumsyndicate.com/item.php?item=9366>.

Candlish, John (1968), ‘St Thomas Aquinas and the Dynamic State of Body Constituents’ in Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, vol.23, July 1968, pp272-275.

Evans, Ernst (1960), Tertullian’s Treatise on the Resurrection, London: SPCK.

Graham, James (1783), A Discourse Delivered on Sunday, August 17th 1783 at Edinburgh, wherein the nature, and manner of the Resurrection of the human Body, and the immortality, or future modes of existence, and progress of the Soul! Are Philosophically, Medically, and Religiously explained, by Doctor James Graham of the Temple of Health, In Pall-Mall, near the King’s Palace, London, Hull: T. Briggs.

Grimm, Veronika E. (1996), From Feasting to Fasting, the Evolution of a Sin, London: Routledge.

Hodgeson, George (1853), The Human Body at the Resurrection of the Dead, London: R.Boyd.

Vine, W.E. (1951), 1 Corinthians, London: Oliphants Limited.

Bodily Resurrection and Food 1: Food and the Living Body

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Dear Friends,

It’s Monday evening and I’ve been putting off writing this because I have had an essay to complete about St. Paul.  I’ve struggled all the way through it.  At first it was as though I was tackling a rump steak with a plastic knife and spoon.  Then, I thought I cracked it.  Finally, I read and read and read on the subject I thought I cracked and ended up with thousands upon thousands of words.  Around 25,000 words of quotations and my own commentary.  So, my essay on resurrection turned out to be an essay on a very specific aspect of resurrection and indeed you wouldn’t think you’d get very much at all out of it.  In fact, to focus it I had to frame the title as a question thus:

Have Ideas on Food and Eating Influenced Understanding of the Corporeal Resurrection Body, Particularly in Relation to 1 Corinthians 15:42-44?

And, you know what? I think they bloomin’ well did! Now, I’m not going to reproduce my essay here, rather only some strands of thought that I’ve been toying with and find quite pertinent.  Essentially, I set off from the passage in 1 Corinthians 15 and discussed various interpretations under two headings: ‘Food and the Living Body’ and ‘Food and the Dead Body’.  In this entry, I’ll only look at the passage itself and food and the living body.  Food and the dead body will have to wait for another evening!

The Passage:

‘It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption: It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power.  It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body.  There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body’ (1 Corinthians 15: 42-44, King James Version)

Of the nineteen other English translations of the bible that I could find to compare with the standard King James Version, there was one that particularly caught my eye.  The New Century Version of the New Testament states that the body is ‘planted’ rather than ‘sown’:

It is the same with the dead who are raised to life.  The body that is “planted” will ruin and decay, but it is raised to a life that cannot be destroyed.  When the body is “planted,” it is without honor [sic], but it is raised in glory.  When the body is “planted,” it is weak, but when it is raised, it is powerful.  The body that is “planted” is a physical body.  When it is raised, it is a spiritual body. (1 Corinthians 15: 42-44, New Century Version)

Also rather striking is the replacement of the word ‘natural’ with ‘physical’.  The Wycliffe New Testament Version goes further still, replacing ‘natural’ with ‘beastly’, emphasising the animal and spiritual dichotomy.  The natural/ physical/ beastly body always somehow becomes a spiritual one after the seed is ‘sown’ or ‘planted’.  Each of these slight differences in interpretation emphasise the existence of two distinct states of body, whatever they are ultimately described as.  Logically, therefore, one understands that there is transition between the two states; a passage through the margins of two conditions or bodies of being.  This is what I understand to be the bodily resurrection.

The seed metaphor seems to have persisted in many of the examples I have found from later periods.  For instance, A Sermon Preached at Whitehall in 1694 by George Stanhope, interprets that man ‘comes up like a flower’ and, when trampled, there is ‘hope that it will sprout again’ (Stanhope 1694, 17).  Later still, James Graham in 1783 adopts a similar, yet grander, interpretation.  Graham asserts the following is ‘the real and rational meaning of the Scriptures’ and ‘what [he] understand[s] to be meant by the resurrection of the body’ passage from 1 Corinthians 15 (Graham 1783, 17)

That the human body, being originally formed of, and recruited or supported, whilst alive, by continual accessions of certain combinations of the primary, elementary particles of matter, returns, at what we call Death, and crumbling down into its parent earth, is again dispersed, and its component particles of invisible fire, air, water, oil, salts, and earth separate, and each returning to the great original mass or womb, from which nature took it, is assimilated, and re-animated by their kindred particles in their respective great masses of the elements of air, earth, fire, water &c (ibid.)

Further, Graham insists that the ‘flesh, blood, and juices’ that are now mine once belonged to ‘the sheep, to the ox, and to the hog’ (Graham 1783, 5-6).  Distributing ownership in this manner seems antithetical to many interpretations, however.  Faced with Bynum’s assertion that in the early 200s a ‘crude material continuity’ in resurrection stories prevailed (Bynum 1995, 27) and Graham’s description of dispersing particles, it is amazing how Bynum could well have been describing Graham’s conception (roughly) 1600 years earlier.  There seems to be a direct correlation between the seed and that which sprouts from it in each case and the passing from corruptible to incorruptible is one that should be understood by the transition from an inside to an outside.

Food and the Living Body:

And now we come to the living body.  Here I thought about the ideas of ‘inside/ outside’ as they might relate to food.  I thought about ancient Jewish ideas about the body and its excreta and the similarities between the descriptions of spittle, semen, tears, excrement, et cetetra, and the ‘corruptible’ human body.  In her Purity & Danger, Mary Douglas points out that, amongst the ancient Jews, bodily excreta (spittle, semen, tears, excrement, et cetera) was considered ‘unclean’ (Douglas 1966, 124).  Once something had passed through the body, it was not recognised as part of the body.  Neyrey supported this assertion by insisting that Paul, as a Pharisee ‘would have been socialised to concern himself with bodily purity and pollution’ (Neyrey 1990, 112).  Later in his work, Neyrey refers to the difference between terrestrial and celestial bodies as being congruent with Paul’s Pharisaic sense of ‘an exact purity system: a place for everything and everything in its place’ (Neyrey 1990, 143), hence the construction of the ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ categories of thought.  Dale Martin notes, in his The Corinthian Body, that ‘in the ancient world, notions of the body and pollution were related to concepts of disease’ (Martin 1995, 139) and the difference between inside and outside was central in not only thinking about eating but also the treatment of things passing through the margins of the body.  Tears, saliva, semen, urine, and other bodily excrement were considered as ‘outside’ and impure/ dirty/ corrupt.  This logic of bodily excreta being unclean can be observed in the notion of a kosher meal, where the blood needs to be drained from the meat entirely before serving.

So, if you were to transpose this logic onto the bodies that Paul concerns himself with in 1 Corinthians 15, that would suggest that human bodies are the excrement of the ‘other side’ or heaven.  ‘Paradise’ is like a body that we have been ejected from; humans are the spittle and excrement of the incorruptible, as it were, only we can pass through this margin to become pure and incorruptible after death.  There is a chance of redemption.  The transition between inside and outside is between the two states.  It is present in corruption/ incorruption; perishable/ imperishable; clean/ unclean; and pure/ impure.  I suggest that Paul’s understanding of resurrection of the body is that of something coming from outside (earth) to inside (heaven); the body is impure excrement, therefore unclean, hoping to be made a pure and incorruptible heavenly body.

Further, I looked at interpretations of the passage directly from the Greek bible, such as that of W.E. Vine.  He points out that the word used for ‘corruption’, Phthora, ‘is used of the condition of creation [...]; of the effect of the withdrawal of life and thus of the condition of the human body in burial’ but he also points out that there is nothing in this word ‘or in the stronger word diapthora to involve or even suggest annihilation’, rather transition (Vine 1951, 219).  This would then be congruent with the interpretations supporting transition or movement through margins, such as eating, rather than destruction and re-invention (as in the example of Clement of Rome’s version of the Phoenix myth that I’ll talk about later when I get to food and the dead body).

Thomas Aquinas (1225 – 1274), in his Summa contra Gentiles, recommends that in the resurrection ‘life will be provided by God alone’, whereas our present life has been provided through the ‘co-operation of nature’ (Aquinas 1927, 284) so there will be no need for food or sex.  These things are ‘pleasures of the beast’ (ibid, 288) and not required of the incorruptible.  An author writing under ‘A. Layman’ echoes this in these sentiments:

‘The body we bury, a natural animal body, resembling the body of the beast in its wants and appetites and passions, shall be raised a spiritual body.  We shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more.  We shall neither marry, nor be given in marriage, but be as the angels which are in heaven.’ (Layman 1851, 21)

In a spirit of optimism, there seems to be expectation that one can prepare one’s earthly body for resurrection.  I recently stumbled upon a volume in the British Library entitled Narratives of two families exposed to The Great Plague of London with Conversations on Religious Preparation for Pestilence by John Scott (1831) who reprinted the pamphlet from some work on recommended preparations for the Great Plague because (he wrote in the introduction) it provided him and his family with many hours of pleasure. In it was discussion on how one might prepare the soul and body for the plague (which was interpreted as being the final judgement or rapture).  The brother and sister in the second narrative locked themselves up in a closet every Tuesday and Friday, and kept both days as solemn fasts, ‘neither eating nor drinking till about four o’clock in the afternoon… [they humbled themselves before God] with fasting, with weeping, and with mourning.’ (Scott 1831, 114)  Abstaining from ‘degenerat[ing] into Flesh and Sense’, as Stanhope (1694, 23) puts it in one of his sermons, is one reason given for this behaviour.  Perhaps Karl Olav Sandnes, in his Belly and Body in the Pauline Epistles, can provide some context for this belief:

Paul’s critique of belly-worship is [...] rooted in his belief that life must be led in a way which is appropriate to the future destiny of the body.  Believers are therefore expected to live with a view towards the resurrection of their body. [...]. A life without the hope of resurrection is marked by eating and drinking, characteristics of earthly existence.  Faith in the future resurrection of the body makes the difference; true believers make use of their stomach according to this firm hope.  [...].  Heavenly identity or resurrection-faith is assessed by food and drinking habits. (Sandnes 2002, 186)

An early Christian writer from the late second and early third centuries, Tertullian (c160 – c220), has yet another interpretation.  In De Ieiunio, he states that ‘the Devil tempts by means of food, so Jesus fasted in order to show the Devil that “the new man” is too strong for the power of hunger.’ (8:2, quoted in Grimm 1996, 131).  That this is also how one should behave is implied and confirmed in another piece of his writing, De Resurrectione Carnis, where he states that ‘fasting, deferred and meagre food, and the squalor which accompanies this observance’ pleases God (printed with commentary in Evans 1960, 25) Preparing for the resurrection by fasting does not seem to be a physical requirement, merely one showing faith, yet is another facet derived from Paul’s words that involves food.

To convey his understanding of the relationship between the body and food, Hodgson uses a peculiar metaphor that I think might be attractive to the LitSciMed crowd: an ‘aerial machine’ that is ‘only two-thirds inflated, [...] in a state of partial collapse, from the want of gas.  Thus it is with the body, from the want of nourishment’. (Hodgeson 1853, 41-42) The natural body may flag and alter its dimensions with its intake of food and general development but it is able to be inflated again in the resurrection, whatever contours it ends up having in corruption.

So… that’s about the half of it.  In a few days I will post about food and the dead body!

I hope that you have enjoyed this little post and my attempt to make it bite-sized and I will look forward to seeing the majority of you here in London at Event 2!

——————————————————–

List of Works Cited:

Aquinas, Thomas (1923), Summa contra Gentiles, Trans. Fathers of the English Dominican Province, London: Burns Oates & Washbourne ltd

Bynum, Caroline Walker (1995), The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christianity, 200-1336, New York: Columbia University Press.

Douglas, Mary (1966), Purity and Danger, London: Routledge

Evans, Ernst (1960), Tertullian’s Treatise on the Resurrection, London: SPCK

Graham, James (1783), A Discourse Delivered on Sunday, August 17th 1783 at Edinburgh, wherein the nature, and manner of the Resurrection of the human Body, and the immortality, or future modes of existence, and progress of the Soul! Are Philosophically, Medically, and Religiously explained, by Doctor James Graham of the Temple of Health, In Pall-Mall, near the King’s Palace, London, Hull: T. Briggs.

Grimm, Veronika E. (1996), From Feasting to Fasting, the Evolution of a Sin, London: Routledge

Hodgson, George (1853), The Human Body at the Resurrection of the Dead, London: R.Boyd

Layman, A (1851), Lecture on the Resurrection of the Body; compiled from the Writings of Paul, Dick, Hall and others, Albany: Joel Munsell

Martin, Dale B (1995), The Corinthian Body, New Haven: Yale University Press)

Neyrey, Jerome H (1990), Paul in Other Words, Westminster: John Knox Press

Sandnes, Karl Olav (2002), Belly and Body in the Pauline Epistles, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

Scott, John (1831), Narratives of two families exposed to The Great Plague of London with conversations on religious preparation for pestilence, Privately Printed.

Stanhope, George (1693), A Sermon Preached at Whitehall, Private Collection, London: Doctor Williams’ Library

Vine, W.E. (1951), 1 Corinthians, London: Oliphants Limited

My Presentation from litscimed

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Dear all,

This is just a quick post to give a link to where the ’swf’ of my presentation can be accessed should any of you wish to re-live the moment for whatever reason!!!

If you click on the ‘London Consortium’ logo, you can move to the next page.  On one of the pages (the second, I think) you have to click on ‘transplant’ to bring up the images representing what ‘transplant’ means.  Actually, any time you get to a slide which has a blank space, if you click on whatever else is on that screen, something else is likely to pop up… if nothing else does, just click on the Consortium logo again… sorry for the confusing interface.  I didn’t think it would be up here.

Also, I’ve kept the additional material on that I had in case I went quicker than I thought I would.  The final two slides are about nose operations.  The last slide will rotate through images depicting an Italian [Nose] Job (see what I’ve done there?).  There is no clicking needed.  I planned to talk about this nose job as the images rotated!

Phew!

If you do decide to re-visit, please enjoy!

St Deiniols Library: Day 4

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Dear Cohort,

Disaster strikes! Well, it struck last night when Steve and I were looking through some books and I decided to photograph the chess set.  You see, dear friends, my camera battery ran out and the charger is in London.  Bugger.  So, if anyone has a Nikon battery or charger, please let me know!

So, today I’m going to be text-based.

Waking up was particularly difficult today.  It was a heavy night reading with Steve in the lounge of this terrific library.  There are some fantastic volumes there.  There was an interesting essay on Spinning Tops in an early 20th Century book called ‘Readings of the Scientist’.  Also, there was an attempt at discussing cloud formations by talking about painting them.  I’ve seldom seen as many usages of ‘azure’.  We read each other passages from various texts of Empire, and were each highly amused.  I suppose that we found sniggered dramatizes the fact that the values have changed so much since the days when one could write a novel about ‘Mr Sponge’ and, in the preface, write that there is no need for a preface except to say that young ladies should not be promiscuous and, instead, take up hunting! It seemed to be satirical and intentionally amusing… but you can never be too sure!  It reminded me of a piece of Thackery’s travel writing I once read where, upon noticing that statues of lions adorned the buildings of each European city he travelled to, he wrote something along the lines of: ‘I have noticed that the lions in one city roar very much the same as the lions in another’.  I think this almost Laconic quality is lacking in much writing.  It is a little bit of a shame, since the nuance of many meanings, I think, can be lost.  I really enjoy reading such texts.  I don’t know if I can inject my own writing with such life and laconic utterances.  I’ll work towards it, but I don’t know whether it would be acceptable… or even whether or not I have the mental furniture to attempt such a thing.  I know many people criticise Serres’ writing for being ‘poetic’ but what kind of criticism is that supposed to be?

Then today I, Sophie, and Jeff talked about the location of the soul and the Aristotlian idea of a ‘common sense’ whereby one senses that they are sensing and how that idea differs from that of consciousness.

I shall say little, as usual, of the day’s events, though it goes without saying that they were of top quality.

Tomorrow is the final day of our first event.  I sincerely hope that I keep in touch with some of the people I have met here, for whom there is no set of words I can draw upon at the moment that would do them justice.  MOSI looks to be another great day.  The last time I went there, I had a picture of myself with my hearing swapped round.  See below:

The last time I went to the Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester (2007, I think!)

The last time I went to the Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester (2007, I think!)

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!