4. Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) - Faculties submissions
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Item The Body Navigated Through Moments of Abstraction(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023-03) Lopatecki, Diana; Williams, JoshuaMy research explores how bodily trauma and the power dynamic between doctor and patient influences the relationship that an individual has with their body. I investigate bodily trauma such as physical injury or an accident that takes place and results in harm done to one’s body, as well as how a patient becomes vulnerable under the gaze of medical professionals. These moments of bodily trauma and the interactions between doctor and patient abstract one’s understanding of their physical body. By examining the writers and artists that work in this field of interest, as well as the globally recognised standard medical textbooks, my research and my practice aims to explore these moments of abjection that are experienced as well as the shift that takes place within an individual when they are altered from subject to object. I engage with these notions further in my practice through sculptural works/ installations that investigate the manner in which we look at and into the body, particularly with regards to physical injury.Item Paradise on Earth as a Motto, the Price of Happiness. What Happens to the Body in Late Capitalism(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023-01) Salmon, Audrey; Gillepsie, Kelly; Andrew, David; Sakota-Kokot, TanjaIsn’t it now guaranteed that ‘paradise’ can be accessible during our lifetime? Haven’t you read, heard, or seen this somewhere yet? I have. Consequently, without thinking, I fully embraced this promise. Paradise is here and there, paradise is this and that, paradise is everything, everywhere. Nonetheless it happens to be a sort of cornucopia eventually resulting in no choice. It is a repetitive and merciless empty promise. Paradise on Earth is a brutal and transformative repetition colonising bodies. Forty thousand and one times the word paradise is written down. Forty thousand and one times is the core of the thesis. It is the thesis, and it forms and materialises brutality. It forms and materialises transformation. It attempts to figure and identify the specific effect of this specific condition on the body while paradoxically trying to give a voice to this same fainting body. Paradise, can you hear, see, touch it or even dream about it? The first image that comes to my mind is comforting. A smile even lifts the corners of my mouth, the object of my desire being almost here. Sadly, paradise on Earth’s ubiquity only reminds us of our failures. Up to today it is still haunting. All the way along, repetition happens to be an organ of torture as much as salvation. This research intends to take us through the work of diagnosis, and the embodied entanglement in these conditions under late capitalism.