This book explores the impact of the body on the mediation of character
in adaptations. Specifically, it thinks about how identity is shaped by
the body and how this alters meanings of adaptations. With an
increasingly digital world, the importance of the body may be seen as
diminishing. However, the book highlights the different political and
social meanings the body signifies, which in turn renders character.
Through a discussion of adaptations of sexuality, race, and mental
difference, the mediation of character is shown to be tied to the
physical. The book challenges the hierarchies in place both for the
understanding of character, which privileges the actor, and in
adaptations, which privileges the original. The discussion of the body,
character, and adaptation asserts that the meanings the physical has in
its shaping of, and by, character in adaptations reflect the way in
which we position our own bodies in the world.