Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 49

Four Milligrams of Phenomenology 45 with her friends. The ad ends with her lament, ‘you should’ve been there, Dad.’ Again, in this ad, the themes of inhalation, pain, and corporeal containment are primary. ‘Dad’ labors over inhalation, a direct result of the inhalation of cigarette smoke in the first instance. He is, by means of the respirator machine, corporeally cut off from his daughter, who cannot reach him over its bulk, and he is cut off from establishing conversation with her. ‘Dad’ is also corporeally constricted because he is bedridden, unable to establish intercorporeal relationships in conversation, through touch, or outside at the cricket match. His inhalation of smoke has incarcerated him in an invisible, smoky prison, given form in the world of the hospital, and has cut him off from a variety of intercorporeal engagements that constitute his usual modes of movement, sociality, and communication. Corporeal containment is also presented in anti-smoking advertisements through the raising of awareness of the insides of the body. The anti-smoking lobby is well aware of the fact that many smokers do not pay attention to their lungs, and cannot in the course of everyday life be aware of the condition of these organs. The Government Health Authority Warning on my package of Peter Stuyvestant Lights informs me that I may not be aware of the ways in which my lungs are being damaged as I smoke: ‘Lung cancer can grow and spread before it is noticed.’15 To the end of awareness, lungs are filmed inside the body, and warnings about the insides of ‘my body’ are posted in large text on the front of my cigarette package. These aspects of the body are shown to be wholly contained within the site of ‘my own body,’ increasing present attention to them as wholly contained within me and separate from any external world with which I might more habitually engage. Many theoreticians, including Serres,16 Compton,17 Langer,18 and Levy,19 have argued that pain occasions the self-reflexive attention that is required to enact a separation between person and world, however fleeting and incomplete that ‘separation’ is bound to be in a person who can never fully achieve such a condition in life.20 Serres argues that drawing attention to an intersection between a person and an aspect of the world results in experiences of pain or suffering. The constriction of the body, the holding in of one’s breath, Serres would argue, constitutes a restriction of the most basic of human joys: that of habitual and necessary entailment. Even in a breath, as Serres would remind us, bodily joy ensues when the body, as it always must, exceeds itself.21 Pain is a critical part of the invitation that the anti-smoking lobby issues to move away from habitual intertwinement, to attend to a present condition of the body. The parts of the body that are shown on anti-smoking advertisements are shown through a lens of pain and damage. The anti-smoking lobby draws specific attention not to immediately-experienced pain which ushers in reflexive attention, but to the inevitability of pain as a result of smoking practice. For this, we go inside the body, which is busily building up the resources that will result in the inevitable pain, including the physical pain of smoking-related illnesses and the emotional pain of guilt that occurs when one intertwined body; ‘Dad’s’