Abstract
Appealing to theorists such as Judith Butler, Walter Benjamin, Michel Foucault, Donna
Haraway, and Bibi Bakare-Yusef, the aim of the following is to show that, despite
ongoing critique, Cartesian dualism continues to haunt our analyses of the
relationship of the subject to embodiment, particularly with respect to the
experience of pain. Taking Bakare-Yusef's critique of Elaine
Scarry's account of institutionalized violence (slavery) as an example, I
will argue, first, that the dualistic impulse which Bakare-Yusef identifies in
Scarry's view has deep historical roots in, for instance,
Aristotle's
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