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[...]... Angus Vail and I have done in expanding and updating CustomizingtheBody is to provide an account ofthe changes that have occurred within the artistic and cultural world oftattooingandthe larger world ofbody alteration in the past decade and a half One change and a fairly superficial one—is seen in the rise and decline in popularity of certain tattoo styles and images As we emphasize in the Epilogue,... understandings In CustomizingtheBody I use the case oftattooing to explore which factors increase or decrease the likelihood that an activity will be defined as “artistic,” its product defined as art, ” and/ or the worker producing it defined as an “artist.” Despite this central focus ofthe book—its expansion ofthe “institutional” perspective within the sociology ofartCustomizingtheBody has... such diverse types of products as graffiti art, car art, underground comix, limitedproduction toys and statuary, customized clothing, art brut,” record-album art, black-velvet paintings, pulp art, poster art, prison art, tiki art, anime and manga, pulp art, andtattooing Inspired by the dadaists and surrealists ofthe 1920s and 1930s, advocates and practitioners of lowbrow art reject the constraints... interactants in an established art world, thus expanding the idea I proposed in 1989—that tattooing is an interesting issue that can be examined using the analytic tools offered by the sociology of artThe relevance ofCustomizingtheBody to the sociological analysis ofart is, to my mind, the book’s greatest virtue and its most important contribution I rely on the view ofart as a product created through... historical and cross-cultural account ofbody alteration This is followed by a brief description ofthe production ofculture perspective andthe institutional theory of art These orientations structure my view ofthe social process by which certain objects and activities are produced and come to be socially valued as legitimate art Finally I outline the general organization ofthe tattoo world with particular...x Preface to the Revised and Expanded Edition ety of tattoo-oriented titles such as International Tattoo Art, Skin & Ink, and Tattoo Magazine on their magazine racks Clearly, tattooing has moved out ofthe dark underground ofthe 1950s into the spotlight of mainstream commercial culture Given the “mainstreaming” of tattooing, the declining power of the tattoo to generate what I call... place (Goffman 1963b; Lofland 1973: 79-80) These issues of voluntary body alteration deviation from appearance norms and the social impact of purposive public stigmatization provide the central theme orienting this introductory material and the subsequent chapters on the social and occupational world oftattooing In non-western tribal cultures, the dominant pattern is that certain modes ofbody alteration... “Miami Ink” to recognize that much of what I wrote about tattooing in the late 1980s continues to be relevant The occupational world oftattooingandthe interactions that take place within the tattoo shop are essentially the same as I first described them The impact ofthe tattoo on the recipient’s personal and social identity andthe symbolic meaning ofthe tattoo for the tattooee have not changed What... way of India, China and Japan Theories of how the diffusion oftattooing into Pacific Island cultures took place vary It is most probable that the practice was carried by the Ainu a nomadic caucasian group that now inhabits the northern island of Japan Samoan explorers may have adopted tattooing after encountering it in their western travels and introduced it into Fiji, Australia, New Zealand, and the. .. prior to the publication ofCustomizingtheBody there was only a very limited bodyof academic discussion Apart from the anthropological discussions, most of this material emphasized the medical dangers oftattooingandthe psycho-pathological factors that impelled people to permanently decorate their bodies As we stress in the Epilogue, this sort of psycho-medical bias is still common in the literature . alt="" CUSTOMIZING THE BODY Temple University Press Philadelphia CUSTOMIZING THE BODY The Art and Culture of Tattooing REVISED AND EXPANDED EDITION Clinton R. Sanders with D. Angus Vail Temple University. examined using the analytic tools offered by the sociology of art. The relevance of Customizing the Body to the sociological analy- sis of art is, to my mind, the book’s greatest virtue and its most important. Angus Vail and I have done in expanding and updating Customizing the Body is to provide an account of the changes that have occurred within the artistic and cultural world of tattooing and the larger