Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 50

46 Popular Culture Review body for example, disentwines from the body of the family through illness and death. The anti-smoking discourse pivots on an axis of constrained corporeality and intercorporeality, drawing attention to and reifying temporal moments of human embodiment that demand reflexive attention. In breath, in social engagement, in pain, the inextricable intertwinement with the world continues; we remain unavoidably socially, respiratorily, corporeally, involved. Selling smoking pleasure Jack Katz recognizes that, for decades, photographers used the idea that smoke marks the projection of self through the world, ‘to suggest the reach of writer’s personalities.’22 Says Katz: ‘there is not any natural marking of the end of one’s projection of self into the world through exhaling (a fact, I suspect, that accounts for much of the attraction of smoking).’23 If, in other words, we visibly mark our breath, in this case, with smoke, we are able to see before our eyes the reach of ourselves extended out into the world. Katz here argues for a view of smoking based on a notion of travel outbound from the body site. Put simply, my smoke, endowed with the capacity for visually traceable travel via my breath, can travel outbound, moving beyond the bounds of where I would have to stay should I subscribe to that ontology in which body and world are separated. A great many advertisements for cigarettes have picked up and extended the metaphor of escape that I am suggesting is based on a certain bodyworld ontology. I can, in some ci v&WGFR