The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles

Can private bodily pain be transformed into a communication medium fit for the public sphere? Can the body in pain be utilized as a means for political participation? If so, how? Under what circumstances? By whom? And to what effect? To begin answering these questions, this dissertation concentrates...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cho, Young Cheon
Other Authors: Gronbeck, Bruce E.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/936
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2321&context=etd
id ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-2321
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-23212019-10-13T04:58:26Z The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles Cho, Young Cheon Can private bodily pain be transformed into a communication medium fit for the public sphere? Can the body in pain be utilized as a means for political participation? If so, how? Under what circumstances? By whom? And to what effect? To begin answering these questions, this dissertation concentrates on extralinguistic confrontational practices such as self-immolation suicide protests that are exercised by those who have been marginalized and excluded from political participation. By focusing on hitherto neglected forms of communication that are visual, spectacular, violent, unruly, and physical, the study expands and complicates the current discussions about the public sphere that are usually yoked to speculation on the boundaries of reason and words. Arguing that the body in pain is a theoretically considerable and practically available mode of public participation, the dissertation examines the rhetorical potency as well as fragility of body rhetoric. Each chapter analyzes different cases of self-immolation, addressing such issues as embodiment in publicity, the gap between private sensation and public discourse, the role of emotion in constituting the public sphere, and the judgments of the audience. The cases offer an opportunity not only to theorize how subaltern people appear out of the darkness of sheltered existence and enter the space of appearance by utilizing their body, but also to rethink the civic art of looking upon suffering. Through the exploration of the place of embodied performance, visual spectacle, and moral stuntsmanship within the larger discussion of democracy, the dissertation endeavors to rehabilitate publicity as a nondialogical political value. 2009-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/936 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2321&context=etd Copyright 2009 Young Cheon Cho Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaGronbeck, Bruce E. democracy pain self-immolation the body the public sphere Communication
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic democracy
pain
self-immolation
the body
the public sphere
Communication
spellingShingle democracy
pain
self-immolation
the body
the public sphere
Communication
Cho, Young Cheon
The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
description Can private bodily pain be transformed into a communication medium fit for the public sphere? Can the body in pain be utilized as a means for political participation? If so, how? Under what circumstances? By whom? And to what effect? To begin answering these questions, this dissertation concentrates on extralinguistic confrontational practices such as self-immolation suicide protests that are exercised by those who have been marginalized and excluded from political participation. By focusing on hitherto neglected forms of communication that are visual, spectacular, violent, unruly, and physical, the study expands and complicates the current discussions about the public sphere that are usually yoked to speculation on the boundaries of reason and words. Arguing that the body in pain is a theoretically considerable and practically available mode of public participation, the dissertation examines the rhetorical potency as well as fragility of body rhetoric. Each chapter analyzes different cases of self-immolation, addressing such issues as embodiment in publicity, the gap between private sensation and public discourse, the role of emotion in constituting the public sphere, and the judgments of the audience. The cases offer an opportunity not only to theorize how subaltern people appear out of the darkness of sheltered existence and enter the space of appearance by utilizing their body, but also to rethink the civic art of looking upon suffering. Through the exploration of the place of embodied performance, visual spectacle, and moral stuntsmanship within the larger discussion of democracy, the dissertation endeavors to rehabilitate publicity as a nondialogical political value.
author2 Gronbeck, Bruce E.
author_facet Gronbeck, Bruce E.
Cho, Young Cheon
author Cho, Young Cheon
author_sort Cho, Young Cheon
title The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
title_short The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
title_full The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
title_fullStr The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
title_full_unstemmed The politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
title_sort politics of suffering in the public sphere: the body in pain, empathy, and political spectacles
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2009
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/936
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2321&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT choyoungcheon thepoliticsofsufferinginthepublicspherethebodyinpainempathyandpoliticalspectacles
AT choyoungcheon politicsofsufferinginthepublicspherethebodyinpainempathyandpoliticalspectacles
_version_ 1719265072531898368