Body horror Capitalism, fear, misogyny, jokes

Anne Elizabeth Moore

Book - 2017

Unspeakable acts are committed on women's bodies under capitalism everyday. In Body Horror, Anne Elizabeth Moore explores the global toll of capitalism on women with thorough research and surprising humor, given the horrific nature of her findings. The essays range from journalistic investigations (the Cambodian garment industry) to thoughts on popular entertainment to her own experiences seeking care and community in the United States health care system.

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Chicago, Illinois : Curbside Splendor Publishing Co [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Anne Elizabeth Moore (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxxi, 229 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781940430881
  • Massacre on Veng Sreng Street
  • The shameful legacy (and secret promise) of the sanitary napkin disposal bag
  • Women
  • A few things I have learned about illness in America
  • Model employee
  • Vagina dentata
  • Consumpcyon
  • Cultural imperative
  • On leaving the birthplace of standard time
  • Superbugs are coming for you!
  • Fake snake oil
  • The presence of no present
  • Fucking cancer
  • The metaphysics of compost
  • Three months after emerging from your deathbed.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sharp, shocking, and darkly funny, the essays in this sapient collection by cultural critic and performance artist Moore (Threadbare) expose the twisted logic at the core of Western capitalism and our stunted understanding of both its violence and the illnesses it breeds. Through such diverse avenues as the garment industry in Cambodia, modeling in New York, the history of the sanitary napkin disposal bag, the development of standard time, and the evolution of intellectual property law, Moore's precise language, organized facts, and intuitive turns of thought uncover the casual and unremitting violence inflicted on the bodies of women by labor, marketing, and compulsive consumption. The book's main topic, though, is illness, especially the rising incidence of autoimmune illnesses, of which Moore has personal and painful experience. In essays that look at drugs and treatment, her ability to diagnose the blind spots of Western medicine and the ableism of our very vocabulary for disease is as incisive and unsettling as the raw misogyny of the horror films she analyzes. Brainy and historically informed, this collection is less a rallying cry or a bitter diatribe than a series of irreverent and ruthlessly accurate jabs at a culture that is slowly devouring us. Agent: Dawn Frederick, Red Sofa Literary. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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