Bodiessocalled
Bodiessocalled is a neologism used in body studies and critical discourse analysis to describe how bodies are named and judged through qualifiers such as so-called and called. The term highlights the evaluative and power-laden dimension of bodily discourse, where labeling practices can legitimize or delegitimize certain bodies or body attributes. By combining “bodies” with “so-called,” the concept signals that categories like health, normality, and disability are not natural facts but contingent social constructs contested by different actors.
Origins and usage: The term appears in scholarly discussions within medical anthropology, disability studies, and sociology
Function: It serves to reveal power relations in the production of knowledge about bodies, to critique taken-for-granted
Examples: “the so-called obesity epidemic” and “the so-called healthy body” appear in critical texts to challenge
Limitations: Critics caution that excessive use of the term can obscure agency, overlook context-specific meanings, or
See also: medicalization; social construction of disease; disability studies; stigma; biopolitics.
Further reading: discussions of language, embodiment, and power in contemporary social theory.