Phantom Pains and Prosthetic Narratives

Phantom Pains and Prosthetic Narratives

  • Alastair Minnis
Publisher:Cambridge University PressISBN 13: 9781108996204ISBN 10: 1108996205

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Phantom Pains and Prosthetic Narratives is written by Alastair Minnis and published by Cambridge University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1108996205 (ISBN 10) and 9781108996204 (ISBN 13).

'Phantom limb pain' designates the sensations which seem to emanate from limbs that in reality are missing. The phrase was coined by the American Civil War surgeon, Weir Mitchell, in reference to his fictional amputee, George Dedlow. Contemporary neuroscience holds that the brain encloses a schema which covers the whole body, and asserts its unity even if certain parts are missing. Reading backwards from Dedlow's sufferings, Alastair Minnis traces the medieval precedents and parallels, focusing on Augustine and Dante, who subscribed to the notion of a 'body in the soul'. Dante's souls in purgatory self-prosthesize with aerial phantoms as they long for the full embodiment which only the resurrection can bring. Is a complete body necessary for personhood? And how can the gamut of human feelings be run if parts or the entirety of one's body does not exist? Combining medieval studies and contemporary neuroscience, this absorbing study explores the fascinating and surprising history of phantom pain.