Ann Burlein,
"The Molecular Body and the Christian Secular"
(page 3 of 7)
Acquiring such a "great white eye" authorized interventions that were
not only epistemic and technical, but also
social.[35] Historian Thomas
Laqueur reads the scientific discourse of the clinic as one of several
kinds of humanitarian narratives in circulation at this time:
parliamentary committees inquiring into mining deaths; the novel; slave
narratives; evangelical accounts of "hearts strangely warmed." While
diverse, these genres shared an affective strategy: all amassed concrete
details of particular forms of physical suffering to construct a sense
of shared bodily/organic nature which they then used to authorize both
the professions and their social intervention. Laqueur writes:
In sharp contrast to tragedy, in which we feel for the
suffering of the protagonist precisely because it is universal and
beyond hope—there is no invitation, or possibility, to do anything to
prevent Macbeth's misdeeds or their consequences—the humanitarian
narrative describes particular suffering and offers a model for precise
social action.[36]
However, the scientific rejection of religious resignation in favor
of the salvation offered by empirical facts was not, in fact, born as an
escape from authoritarian forms of religious
"tutelage."[37] Foucault
presents the birth of modern empirical knowledge as part of a
multi-layered set of historical processes of intensification, which he
dubbed "Christianization in
depth."[38][39] Unique relations of
pastoral power emerged in Catholicism (confession and spiritual
direction), and later in Protestantism (testimony and autobiography). As
ecclesiastical institutions declined, these religious technologies
mutated and "spread out into the whole social
body."[40] Foucault
analyzed their spread and intensification along two lines: first, as a
technology of examination featuring an individualizing tactic common to
medicine, psychiatry, education, and
employers[41]; and second as
technologies of governmentality that became increasingly concerned with
population.[42]
Linking these two lines was a strategy of knowledge-power whose truth
value—in the twinned sense of scientificity and social
legitimation—entailed overtly rejecting religion while strengthening religious and
moral sensibilities. Sometimes these sensibilities were explicitly
evoked. Other times their evocation was indirect (as when religious
sensibilities were strengthened to obtain the benefit of speaking
against them). The human body was a privileged site for enacting this
twofold gesture of rejecting, while reproducing, religious
sensibilities. Thus the human body has become enrolled in producing 'the
secular' as a Christian secularism.[43]
The co-constitution of religion and the scientific secular goes well
beyond logical indebtedness. It entangles us in a history that we have
by no means left in the past; it continues to affect the reconfiguration
of the body, sexuality, and soul that is currently at play in
neo-liberal reforms of governance and economy. While the body in
question for neoliberalism is no longer that of pathological anatomy,
the human body nevertheless remains a privileged site for 'secular'
re-workings of material relations. "[H]ealth has become a site of
experimentation for the 'new capitalism' and its fascination with the
promissory value that speculation generates" (according to
pharmaceutical industry insider Philippe
Pignarre).[44] As Melinda
Cooper explains: "If we recall that the peculiarity of the welfare state
was to guarantee both the productive life of the nation and its
'unproductive' phases (childhood and old age, the beginning and end of
life), in an effort to underwrite the entire life cycle, it becomes
clear that the neo-liberal state demarcates itself precisely by
withdrawing from the extremes of childhood (education, child care, child
protection) and old age."[45]
The rationale for state withdrawal from
these extremes of life is to render these non-productive stages of life
productive by entrusting them to the free creativity of the private
sphere—both private business and the private family. Consider how
managed care opened up the non-profit sector of health care to private
companies. Or consider how Reagan shifted old age insurance away from
defined benefit plans to defined contribution, individual plans that
speculated in the stock market. Writes Cooper:
The so-called new economic growth of the late
1990s—characterized by a spectacular rise of digital and life science
technologies in the U.S.—would not have been possible without th[is]
speculative investment .... It is no coincidence that these funds were
attracted to the emerging field of regenerative
medicine ....[46]
The growth of biotech was also enabled by legal instruments that
re-defined intellectual property to allow for the private ownership of
natural entities (formerly excluded from patent law). While 'the human
person' has remained uncommodifiable, and in that sense sacrosanct,
biotech focuses on capturing the generative capacities of the body
before they take on determinate form and thereby fall into the domain of
the uncommodifiable potential person. In this way, 'life itself' became
enterprised up as "a source of speculative surplus
value."[47] These
legal reforms facilitated the opening of a new space of production, one
that seeks to re-enliven that which had formerly been perceived as
waste. Yet as biotech start-ups demonstrate, what matters most to this
process of enlivening is less the tangible goods produced and more the
speculative promise of future profit (based on present-day intellectual
property rights to biological processes and methods that might one day
generate actual goods and services).[48]
In keeping with neoliberalism's attempt to render productive life's
capacity for future capacity, the molecular body is no longer perceived
in terms of the amoral violence of nature or the lyrical interiority of
death and shame. Rather than being held together by linear logics of
identity and history that foreground shame and death, new ways of
bundling body/soul/fate into sexuality are being made and folded back
into the biological body and the humanitarian narratives that
proliferate around it. Memory is still key, but molecular memories are
not backward looking but forward pulling. It is to these new ways of
bundling body, soul, and fate that I will now turn.
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