Commodified Bodies
Organ Transplants and the Organ Trade
By Oliver Decker
To Be Published February 15th 2014 by Routledge – 144 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Science, Technology and Society
To Be Published February 15th 2014 by Routledge – 144 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Science, Technology and Society
Commodified Bodies examines the social practice of organ transplantation and trafficking and scrutinises the increasingly neoliberal tendencies in the medical system. It analyses phenomena such as the denomination of human body parts as "raw materials" and "commodities," or the arguments used by the proponents for a free market solution. Moreover, it argues that modern medicine is still linked with its religious roots. The commodification of body parts is seen not as an imperialistic act of the market, but as the end of a historical process as the notion of "fetishism" links the market with the body. Marx’s concept of commodity fetishism and Sigmund Freud’s theory of the perverted use of objects are modified and adapted to the reconstruction of the joint beginnings of market and medicine.
Oliver Decker is visiting professor for Social and Organisational Psychology at Siegen University.
Name: Commodified Bodies: Organ Transplants and the Organ Trade (Hardback) – Routledge
Description: By Oliver Decker. Commodified Bodies examines the social practice of organ transplantation and trafficking and scrutinises the increasingly neoliberal tendencies in the medical system. It analyses phenomena such as the denomination of human body parts as "raw...
Categories: Medical Sociology, Social Theory, The Body, Cultural Theory, Sociology of Religion, Sociology of Science & Technology, Social & Cultural Anthropology