From Disfigurement to Facial Transplant: Identity Insights

Body and Society 21 (4):3-23 (2015)
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Abstract

The face embodies for the individual the sense of identity, that is to say, precisely the place where someone recognizes himself and where others recognize him. From the outset the face is meaning, translating in a living and enigmatic form the absoluteness yet minuteness of individual difference. Any alteration to the face puts at stake the sense of identity. Disfigurement destroys the sense of identity of an individual who can no longer recognize himself or be recognized by others. Disfigurement places a mask on the face. The goal of a facial transplant consists of restoring an individual’s place in the world and reviving his taste for life, returning to him his ‘human shape’. Facial transplants raise essential anthropological questions such as ‘Who am I?’ and ‘To whom belongs this face that henceforth is mine?’

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References found in this work

What Is a Face?Daniel Black - 2011 - Body and Society 17 (4):1-25.
Vulnerability and the ethics of facial tissue transplantation.Diane Perpich - 2010 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 7 (2):173-185.

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