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A Body, Undone: Living On After Great Pain, by Christina Crosby

Joanna Bourke on a memoir focusing on secrets, grief and desire following a life-changing accident

Published on
May 5, 2016
Last updated
May 5, 2016
Illustration of person's spine highlighted
Source: iStock

Christina Crosby was a fiercely independent, athletic woman. She was a successful academic and the author of an influential book on Victorian literature that argued against a聽totalising view of women as the 鈥渦nhistorical other鈥. She was also a leather-clad, motorbike-riding lesbian. On 1 October 2003, Crosby was on a long-distance bicycle ride when a tree branch caught in her front wheel. She was thrown off the bike and her spinal cord snapped. At the age of 50, she was paralysed. After a long series of operations, she was sent home: her partner, Janet, became her chief carer.

Adjusting to her new circumstances has been formidably difficult. Crosby is alienated from herself. She mourns the body that disappeared and, partly to distract herself, seeks to make intellectual sense of her predicament. Everybody, she muses, both has and is a body, and that sense of embodiment arises in relation to other bodies or that 鈥減lay of recognition鈥. How could this be regained after such a catastrophic injury?

Spinal cord injury literally 鈥渦ndoes鈥 the body. Innumerable indignities 鈥 big and small (such as being unable to fart) 鈥 must be faced every day. Neurological pain is unlike anything suffered by people 鈥渋n the land of the healthy鈥. Although Crosby insists that pain evades analogy or metaphor, she nevertheless seeks to use language to communicate her experiences. Indeed, as her lover reminds her, pain 鈥渞adiate[s] out into the social world鈥, affecting everyone around the sufferer and causing them to suffer as well. It is precisely the contagious nature of pain that causes Crosby to stop talking about it to her partner, friends and colleagues. She speaks bitterly about pain to her therapist, but no one else, fearing that her complaints might become 鈥渃orrosive鈥, eating away 鈥渁t the ties that bind me to others鈥. She claims that she is not 鈥渂ravely suffering in silence鈥; instead, she simply recognises that 鈥渢here鈥檚 nothing to be done鈥.

Crosby refuses to give up on 鈥渟ex positivity鈥. She categorically states that she 鈥渕ay have no gender, but the chair does. It鈥檚 masculine.鈥 Rediscovering 鈥 redefining 鈥 a sex life as a paralysed woman would never be easy. The accident renders her 鈥渦ntouchable鈥, in the sense that her brain cannot register what touch actually 鈥渇eels like鈥. Her lover explains that it is 鈥渓ike she鈥檚 a stone butch鈥 鈥 a metaphor taken from the world of lesbian bar culture and applied to Crosby鈥檚 neurological impairment. There is a bitter irony about the metaphor 鈥 after all, Crosby is not literally a聽鈥渟tone butch鈥, in that she deeply desires to touch and be touched by her lover 鈥 but the metaphor accurately represents her new 鈥渟exual subject-position鈥. As she writes: 鈥淭here is no聽way to rewrite what happens, my lost body is forever lost.鈥

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What is left, though, is grief. Memories of the past haunt her and she refuses to give them up. Crosby fears forgetting 鈥渉ow my embodied passions felt through my whole body鈥. Afraid that she will 鈥渇orget the feeling of joy鈥, she embraces a state of perpetual mourning.

Joanna Bourke is professor of history, Birkbeck, University of London, and author of The Story of Pain: From Prayer to聽Painkillers (2015).

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A Body, Undone: Living On After Great Pain
By Christina Crosby
New York University Press, 208pp, 拢17.99
ISBN 9781479833535
Published 15 March 2016

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Print headine: One second that changed a world

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