Abstract In this paper the author examines how Winterson addresses the issues of boundaries and desire. The author specifically looks at "Written on the Body" and tries to convey to us what physical love means through the act of making us complicit. The author suggests that Winterson does this by telling the story via a narrator who is given neither name nor gender. The author suggests the book thus serves as a personal way of investigating new avenues of sexuality and thus of love.
From the paper:
?This book is an investigation of the body of a beloved ? the body as the site of nerve endings that provide us with all the physical pleasures that we will ever know as well as the repository of all the emotional responsiveness that we can desire. One of the most compelling things about this book is that Winterson does not fall into an easy dichotomy between these two kinds of passions as is all too often the case.?
Abstract Cites benefits including secure space, constant temperature, and food supply. Examines embryonic development and the central nervous system, the role of the placenta, and the ideas of Nancy Angier regarding "mothering" in the womb.
From the Paper "In Woman: An Intimate Geography (1999), Nancy Angier sets out to explain how the female body is made and how it works, and the possible reasons for why it is the way it is. Yet, as unique as the female body is, the one thing that women share with men is ..."