Interview with Marc Lafrance

Image: Marc Lafrance. Source: Concordia University.

Image: Marc Lafrance. Source: Concordia University.

Skin Matters: An Interview with Marc Lafrance
Tomoko Tamari

Published in Theory, Culture & Society 2019, Volume 36, Issue 7-8

Abstract

Image: Body & Society Special Issue, Skin Matters: Thinking Through the Body’s Surfaces, edited by Marc Lafrance.

Image: Body & Society Special Issue, Skin Matters: Thinking Through the Body’s Surfaces, edited by Marc Lafrance.

Following the Body & Society special issue, Skin Matters: Thinking Through the Body’s Surfaces (vol. 24, 1–2), Tomoko Tamari conducted an interview with the special issue editor, Marc Lafrance. He argues for the skin as an interface, which both resists and reinforces binary oppositions. Lafrance is particularly interested in the relationship between the skin and subjectivity, focusing on those who are suffering from traumatic stigmatizing experiences. This theme is also elaborated in the debates around the issue of human-made skin in ‘regenerative medicine’. He argues that while the development of medical technology for human-made organic skin tends often to be welcomed, the actual experience of face-transfer patients following skin graft surgeries is one of physical and psychological hardship along with a complex sense of self-wholeness and ‘reflexive embodiment’. Reflexivity is also an important phenomenon encouraged by the media and social media, which constantly feature representations of the skin.

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