Melissa Wilcox,
"Bodily Transgressions: Ritual and Agency in Self-Injury"
(page 4 of 6)
Self-Injury and Ritual Theory
In her classic text on ritual, Catherine Bell defines ritualization
as "a way of acting that is designed and orchestrated to distinguish and
privilege what is being done in comparison to other, usually more
quotidian, activities."[44]
Though self-injury is sometimes impulsive,
undertaken at the peak of an emotional crisis, its repetitive nature
means that it's frequently a carefully designed practice. Self-injurers
need to have tools at hand and have a space in which they can
self-injure uninterrupted. Many plan where and how to self-injure,
selecting a preferred method and choosing where on their bodies to
inflict pain. Is self-injury "distinguish[ed] and privilege[d] ... in
comparison to other ... activities?" Yes, in that it's a regular practice
that takes place in a time and a space set aside from other activities.
Can it be counted as ritual?
It may be helpful here to turn to Bell's formulation of ritual practice as
"(1) situational; (2) strategic; (3) embedded in a misrecognition of
what it is in fact doing; and (4) able to reproduce or reconfigure a
vision of the order of power in the world"—what she terms "redemptive
hegemony."[45]
Self-injury, when engaged in repeatedly as a planned
response to environmental or internal stimuli, fits these criteria. It's
clearly situational, responding to particular events or internal states.
It's strategic: those who use self-injury do so to induce or eradicate a
particular emotional state or to give voice to otherwise unspeakable
pain. Is it embedded in a misrecognition of what it's doing? Yes, if we
consider the question of power raised in Bell's concept of redemptive
hegemony. Bell argues that ritual is an important method of creating and
reordering reality: "ritualization as a strategic mode of practice
produces nuanced relationships of power, relationships characterized by
acceptance and resistance, negotiated appropriation, and redemptive
reinterpretation of the hegemonic order."[46]
I would argue that some
forms of self-injury, especially cutting and burning, express and
renegotiate relationships of power through the refiguring of bodily
violation, while at the same time remaining unaware of that refiguring
and also of the ways in which self-injury re-implicates the injurer in
systems of domination.
Reading some forms of self-injury as ritualization affords us a
nuanced perspective on the roles of power in these practices. Bell notes
that, "ritual practices are produced with an intent to order, rectify,
or transform a particular situation"—in this case, a sense of
violation or lack of control—and that the "end" of ritualization is
the "production of a 'ritualized body'" and "sociocultural situations
that the ritualized body can dominate in some
way."[47] Seligman,
Weller, Puett, and Simon agree, echoing Scarry's theory of pain:
"Getting it right [in ritual] is ... an act of world
construction."[48] The
ritualization involved in some forms of self-injury has as its end the
rectification of a situation out of control: emotions out of control,
bodily integrity out of control, voice and silence controlled by others.
Through the ritual of self-injury, the participant produces a situation
in which she or he is in control, giving voice against silence,
controlling the violation of bodily boundaries. Through the ritual of
self-injury, the participant creates a world in which she has control
over her body, in which she has a voice. Ritualization, Bell notes, is
"the avoidance of explicit speech and narrative"—the avoidance of
prohibited speech about violation and pain—and also "the expression of
things that cannot be expressed in any other
way."[49] Ritual also
creates a sense of the sacred by differentiating it from
the profane—this is part of its set-apart nature. The experience of uncontrollable
violation is an experience of profanity; in self-injuring, controlled
violation, the self-injurer may even re-sacralize a violated body.
Indeed, Bell argues that ritual "acts to restructure bodies in the
very doing of the acts themselves."[50]
The self-injurer reconstructs
her body as one which can give voice to violation—a body that speaks
through its visible scars the pain of the invisible ones—and one which
controls its own violation. Self-injury turns a silenced, uncontrolled,
vulnerable, and violated body into a speaking, controlled, armored, and
self-violated one.
And yet, this control is ambivalent, for the body and the self that
are created through the ritual of self-injury may not entirely be those
intended by the participant. Seligman, Weller, Puett, and Simon offer a
model of "ritual as a subjunctive—the creation of an order as
if it were truly the case," stressing "the incongruity between the
world of enacted ritual and the participants' experience of lived
reality."[51]
Those who self-injure may feel a sense of control and
voice during the self-injury, and may use their scars as reminders of
that control, but clearly the feeling fades over time in the face of
everyday experiences—if it didn't, self-injury wouldn't be a repeated
and often addictive action. Bell again offers a key when she argues that
"ritualization does not see how it actively creates place, force, event,
and tradition, how it redefines or generates the circumstances to
which it is responding."[52]
The message of self-injury is fully
coherent only in a community of others who self-injure; beyond this
community, the self-injured body is seen simply as violated, the
self-injurer as disordered. Furthermore, while the externalized force of
self-injury may be to give voice, what is internalized is the wounding.
As Amy Hollywood notes, "ritual is productive of the
subject."[53] How
might one describe the subject produced by the ritual of self-injury? It
is a subject whose primary aspect is woundedness. In the end, the
self-injurer gives voice but is not heard; she subverts and at the same
time reproduces the violation, recreating her socialized body and
literally reinscribing the structures of power upon her body. She
reclaims agency only to lose it to a medical system that regards her as
abnormal and mutilated. The ritual of self-injury reconfigures but also
reproduces "a vision of the order of power in the world"; it is
"embedded in a misrecognition of what it is in fact
doing."[54]
This ambivalence, this production of paradox, is an important part of
the nature of ritual. As Bell notes, ritualization "create[s] social
bodies in the image of relationships of power," and "also empower[s]
those who may at first appear to be controlled."[55] "By focusing on the
making and remaking of the body," she adds, ritual "reproduces the
sociopolitical context in which it takes place while also attempting to
transform it."[56]
In self-injury, this happens in several ways. On the
one hand, self-injury is empowering. It provides emotional regulation
and offers a vivid symbolic representation of suffering, especially in
cases where the suffering is the result of violation by another. It
replaces uncontrollable, external violation with controlled, ritualized
self-violation, returning a sense of order and volition to the
world.
At the same time, the communication embedded in self-injury is only
legible to a small number of people: oneself, others who self-injure,
and some particularly empathetic outsiders who have secondary
experience, either professional or personal, with self-injury. Thus,
although self-injury gives voice to a silenced experience, it runs the
risk of doing so in a vacuum. The experience of giving voice may be
healing regardless, but how powerful is it to give voice when no one is
there to hear? Furthermore, while self-injury is controlled violation,
it remains violation; it continues to do harm to the body that has
already been harmed. Unlike the tattoo clients discussed earlier, those
who self-injure do not do so for bodily adornment. Some may wear their
scars as a part of their life story, but the primary purpose of
self-injury is to cause injury to the body in order to feel better. In
the process, a body that has already suffered violence suffers more.
Simultaneously with empowering the participant, giving voice to a
silenced experience, and placing control back in her or his hands,
self-injury literally reinscribes on the body a social power structure
of violence and domination. What we learn about self-injury through
ritual theory, then, is that it holds deep power to create
meaning—indeed, to create worlds—but that power is ambivalent and paradoxical,
and the world that's constructed in the practice of self-injury may not
be the world that was intended by the practitioner.
What self-injury offers to the study of ritual is the question of
external misrecognition, which fundamentally influences the meaning and
concrete social effects of a ritual. The potential for misreading of
self-injury leads to a potential for re-victimization of those who
self-injure by people whose interpretations of the practice diverge from
those of the self-injurer herself. The flip side, though, of the
ambivalence of self-injury is that it is in fact empowering—and for
very good reasons—despite how self-destructive and maladaptive it may
seem from an outsider's perspective. Other rituals may share this
fundamental ambivalence. This should alert scholars to be sensitive, in
the analysis of ritual, to practitioners' claims of empowerment, even in
cases where the ritual appears from our own perspective to be
disempowering, and it should also alert us to the risks inherent in the
misrecognition of ritual.
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