“…Mol, 2008;Puig de la Bellacassa, 2009). Throughout this period, the influence of Scarry's thesis has been visible across multiple disciplines and topics, including black subjectivity (da Silva, 2012;Douglass and Wilderson, 2013), drama (Thompson, 2006;Freeland, 2011), history (Bourke, 2011), literary studies (Krimmer, 2008;Bernatchez, 2009;Townsend, 2012;Richards, 2013;Zhang, 2014), media and cultural studies (Biressi, 2004;Dauphinee, 2007), political and feminist scholarship (Philipose, 2007), and sexuality studies (Ross, 2012). As the diversity and reach of Scarry's influence demonstrates, her ideas have consistently provoked and informed debate about the body, about pain, and about the making (and unmaking) of subjectivity and world (and note that these last two are necessarily conjoined, since Scarry clearly shows how the making or unmaking of one is inevitably and simultaneously the making or unmaking of the other).…”