The Prosthetic Impulse in the Middle Ages: Metaphor, Materiality, and the Promise of the (Post)human
full name / name of organization:
Agatha Hansen
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The title this panel alludes to the recent publication edited by
Marquard Smith and Joanne Morra,__The Prosthetic Impulse__, which probes
the topic of prosthesis in all of its possible manifestations. In its
most basic sense, prosthesis implies both word and body, but the term
extends beyond the relatively straightforward understanding of
human-machine coupling; the function of prosthetics, as generally
accepted by contemporary prosthesis theorists, is to mediate between
perceived binary relations—body and machine, nature and civilization,
the conscious and subconscious, self and other, and man and God. “The
Prosthetic Impulse in the Middle Ages” will seek to explore those points
of contact and encounters with distinctly medieval material,
metaphorical, and figural prosthesis, and modify Smith and Morra’s
observation that “the promise of ‘posthuman’ thought can already be
found in the human” (7): the promise of the posthuman can already be
found in the __medieval__ body. Although prosthesis might point to the
early modern period as its earliest reference, recent studies suggest
that such an assumption is simply not substantiated. One can and should
speak of prosthesis and prosthetics in the Middle Ages, and such a panel
hopes to encourage its discussion in both the field of Disability in
the Middle Ages, and studies of the medieval body, more generally.
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