Bakhtin, M. (1968). Rabelais and his world. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
2.
Battersby, C. (1998). The phenomenal woman: feminist metaphysics and patterns of identity. Cambridge: Polity Press.
3.
Bendelow, G. and Williams, S.J. (1995). Pain and the mind-body dualism. Body and Society, 1(2), 83–103.
4.
Bendelow, G. and Williams S.J. (Eds.) (1998). Emotions in social life: Critical themes, contemporary issues. London: Routledge.
5.
Bourdieu, P. (1984). Distinction: A social critique of the Judgement of Taste. London: Routledge.
6.
Calnan, M. and Williams, S. (1991). Style of life and the salience of health. Sociology of Health and Illness, 13(4), 506–529.
7.
Crawford, R. (1984). A cultural account of ‘health’: control, release and the social body. In J.B. McKinlay (Ed.), Issues in the political economy of health care. London: Tavistock.
8.
Crawford, R. (2000, forthcoming). The ritual of health promotion. In S.J. Williams, J. Gabe and M. Calnan (Eds.), Theorising medicine, health and society. London: Routledge/Taylor & Francis.
9.
Csordas, T.J. (Ed.) (1994). Embodiment and experience: the existential ground of culture and self. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
10.
Douglas, M. (1970). Natural symbols: Explorations in cosmology. London: Cresset Press.
11.
Elias, N. (1978). The civilizing process: the history of manners, Volume I. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
12.
Elias, N. and Dunning, E. (1986). The quest for excitement: Sport and leisure in the civilising process. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
13.
Falk, P. (1994). The consuming body. London: Sage.
14.
Giddens, A. (1984). The constitution of society. Cambridge: Polity Press.
15.
Giddens, A. (1991). Modernity and self-identity. Cambridge: Polity Press.
16.
Giddens, A. (1992). The Transformation of Intimacy. Cambridge: Polity Press.
17.
Grosz, E. (1995). Space, time and perversion. London: Routledge.
18.
Hall, S. and Jefferson, T. (Eds.) (1976). Resistance through rituals. London: Hutchinson.
19.
Jaggar, A. (1989). Love and knowledge: emotion in feminist epistemology. In S. Bordo and A. Jaggar (Eds.), Gender/body/knowledge: Feminist reconstructions of being and knowing. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
20.
James, V. and Gabe, J. (Eds.) (1996). Health and the sociology of emotions. Oxford: Blackwell.
21.
Johnson, M. (1987). The body in the mind: The bodily basis of meaning, imagination and reason. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
22.
Lupton, D. (1997). Psychoanalytic sociology and the medical encounter: Parsons and beyond. Sociology of Health and Illness, 19(5), 561–579.
23.
Lupton, D. (1998). The emotional self. London: Sage.
24.
Mauss, M. (1973). Techniques of the body. Economy of Society, 2, 70–88.
Scarry, E. (1985). The body in pain: The making and unmaking of the world. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
27.
Williams, S.J. (1995). Theorising class, health and lifestyles: can Bourdieu help us?Sociology of Health and Illness, 17(5), 577–604.
28.
Williams, S.J. (1996a). Medical sociology, chronic illness and the body: a rejoinder to Mike Kelly and David Field. Sociology of Health and Illness, 18(5), 699–709.
29.
Williams, S.J. (1996b). The vicissitudes of embodiment across the chronic illness trajectory. Body and Society, 2(2), 23–47.
30.
Williams, S.J. (1998a). Health as moral performance: ritual, transgression and taboo. Health, 2(4), 435–457.
31.
Williams, S.J. (1998b). Bodily Dys-order: Desire, excess and the transgression of corporeal boundaries. Body and Society, 4(2), 59–82.
32.
Williams, S.J. (1998c). Modernity and the emotions: Corporeal reflections on the (ir)rational. Sociology, 32(4), 747–769.
33.
Williams, S.J. and Bendelow, G. (1998). The lived body: Sociological themes, embodied issues. London: Routledge.
34.
Williams S.J. and Calnan, M. (Eds.) (1996). Modern medicine: Lay perspectives and experiences. London: UCL Press.