ASSEMBLE, LIKE SO (INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE PHRENOLOGIST’S LOVER

Authors

  • Daniel Scott Tysdal Department of English, University of Toronto Scarborough
  • Elizabeth D. Harvey University of Toronto

Abstract

This submission pairs a poem and a commentary. The lover/speaker in the poem addresses a phrenologist, providing instructions and diagrams for how s/he could be assembled after s/he has died. The poem appears to to celebrate phrenology's understanding of how cranial bumps reveal qualities of mind. The commentary, "Technologies of Assemblage," argues that the poem stages a poetic conversation not just between lover and phrenologist and between eroticism and medicine, but between the technologies of poetic making and the phrenological science of mapping the human brain. The lover implicitly questions the strategies of categorization that define phrenology, and using rhetorical technique and the power of verse, shows how the spirit can outlast death through poetry.

Author Biographies

Daniel Scott Tysdal, Department of English, University of Toronto Scarborough

Senior Lecturer, Creative Wriinng

Elizabeth D. Harvey, University of Toronto

Professor,

Department of English

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Published

2015-09-08

How to Cite

Tysdal, D. S., & Harvey, E. D. (2015). ASSEMBLE, LIKE SO (INSTRUCTIONS FROM THE PHRENOLOGIST’S LOVER. Ars Medica, 10(2). Retrieved from https://ars-medica.ca/index.php/journal/article/view/179

Issue

Section

Poetry