Popular Culture Review Vol. 17, No. 1, Winter 2006 | Page 48

44 Popular Culture Review The TV advertisements, of which there are several different versions, run for around 30 seconds and are aired during primetime on commercial television stations. Common to many is a focus on the inhalation phase of smoking, which is treated as a distinctive phase, and is separated out from exhalation. In the ads, the smoker draws smoke from the cigarette into the mouth, then into the lungs (a process which, as viewers, we may follow on the screen down into the smoker’s lungs, a process which the smoker and the viewers of the smoker are usually entirely unable to view). Aspects of the internal body—the lungs, for example—are shown to be subject to damage in the ads; the lungs are shown filled up with smoke, and a voice-over describes the damage to which they are subject. The ads typically begin with the lighting up of the cigarette, the (hawing in of a single drag from it, and typically end at the point of exhalation of that single drag. Inhalation is here presented as a complete component of what, in habitual experience, is a cyclic and necessarily ongoing respiratory entailment in the world. First, self-conscious attention is drawn to that which we must routinely ignore if breathing is to continue in a habitual, disattended manner. The anti-smoking ads offer up for our examination a specific segment (inhalation) of a habitual action (breathing in and out) that is necessarily cyclic. It is only when we pay specific reflexive attention to the cycle of breath that we can experience breathing as a series of distinctive inhalation and exhalation phases.13 Respiration is more habitually (and necessarily) experienced as an ongoing intertwinement with the world, and, as Katz notes, ‘we do not usually seek to find points in it that undermine its ongoing circularity.’14 Finding points in its ongoing circularity and dwelling upon them reifies a moment of a human just being in the world and is key to the anti-smoking discourse which seeks to draw attention to the body as a bounded physicality that is corporeally cut off from a variety of entailments in the world, including those of breathing. This disentailment has been even more specifically drawn out by the lobby in an advertisement in which the smoking person is presented inside a jail constructed entirely of bars of smoke. Smoke here does a very unsmoke-like thing: it stays in a sited place, as does inhaled smoke for the duration of the anti-smoking advertisement. Smoke and breath are loath to be located; they move and, as they do, they entail and occasion a variety of corpor V