Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter 2007 | Page 67

Broken Bodies, Disruptured Landscapes 63 ambivalence and normality, madness and moderation, disfraction and unity are inscribed on the three bodily domains. As Jackson points out: “places become the objective correlatives of our inner lives”. T h e remapping of places inevitably invokes reshaping the terrain of the self. Both place and self are connected by ‘intimate metaphors’ by which experience is fused with embodiment.'^ To coin Foucault, the practice of using landmines, a technique of dominating the body, has not only exploited the interconnections between land and self to forni ‘docile bodies’ which are alienated from their life worlds but has also reduced the ability for individuals to consummate their embodiment to place. Foucault termed the governance of the body as a form of ‘bio-power’, in which power is exercised over individuals by various institutions.A s Jackson argues, this new kind of governance is crucial to technology’s preoccupation with maintaining a rational pattern of order and control, and is historically constituted by a concern for dominating nature and those human beings (who are) categorised as being inferior.''^ For Foucault, “technologies of domination act essentially on the body, and classify and objectify individuals.”'^ Foucault argued that bio-power was an attempt to c ۜ