Results for 'body aesthetics'

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  1.  24
    bataille, georges. The Cradle of Humanity: Prehistoric Art and Culture. Stuart Kendall (ed. & trans. & introduction) and Michelle Kendall (trans.). MIT Press. 2005. pp. 217. [REVIEW]Human Body - 2006 - British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (2).
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  2.  34
    Body Aesthetics and the Cultivation of Moral Virtues.Yuriko Saito - 2016 - In Sherri Irvin (ed.), Body Aesthetics. Oxford University Press. pp. 225-242.
    This essay discusses how the aesthetics of body movements contributes to cultivating other-regarding moral virtues, such as respect and care. The moral and aesthetic assessment of body movements is commonly regarded as a matter of etiquette and manners, which is considered to be nothing more than a superficial convention or a means of maintaining social hierarchy. I argue instead that body movements often facilitate an aesthetic communication of social virtues. As such, body aesthetics is (...)
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  3.  80
    Body Aesthetics.Sherri Irvin (ed.) - 2016 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    The body is a rich object for aesthetic inquiry. We aesthetically assess both our own bodies and those of others, and our felt bodily experiences have aesthetic qualities. The body features centrally in aesthetic experiences of visual art, theatre, dance and sports. It is also deeply intertwined with one's identity and sense of self. Artistic and media representations shape how we see and engage with bodies, with consequences both personal and political. This volume contains sixteen original essays by (...)
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  4. The Meaning of the Body: Aesthetics of Human Understanding.Mark Johnson - 2007 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In _The Meaning of the Body_, Mark Johnson continues his pioneering work on the exciting connections between cognitive science, language, and meaning first begun in the classic _Metaphors We Live By_. Johnson uses recent research into infant psychology to show how the body generates meaning even before self-consciousness has fully developed. From there he turns to cognitive neuroscience to further explore the bodily origins of meaning, thought, and language and examines the many dimensions of meaning—including images, qualities, emotions, and (...)
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  5.  49
    First-Personal Body Aesthetics as Affirmations of Subjectivity.Madeline Martin-Seaver - 2019 - Contemporary Aesthetics 17.
    This paper redirects some of the philosophical discussion of sexual objectification. Rather than contributing further to debates over what constitutes objectification and whether it is harmful, I argue that aesthetic experience is a useful tool for resisting objectification. Attending to our embodied experiences provides immediate evidence that we are subjects; aesthetically attending to that evidence is a way of valuing it. I consider the human body as an aesthetic site, then as an ethico-aesthetic site, and finally as a site (...)
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  6.  98
    Body Aesthetics.Aili Bresnahan - 2018 - British Journal of Aesthetics 58 (1):111-113.
    £ British Society of Aesthetics 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Society of Aesthetics. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected] unique and sprawling collection of sixteen essays explores a wide range of perspectives on the human body and how it is embodied, lived, viewed, perceived, and constructed by ourselves and by others in both positive and harmful ways. The book’s contributors include philosophers, sociologists, anthropologists, and artists, as well as scholars (...)
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  7.  5
    Body Aesthetics and The Woman Artist with focus on Shusterman’s Somaesthetics. 이지언 - 2011 - Korean Feminist Philosophy 15 (null):181-204.
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  8.  5
    Angels of Desire: Esoteric Bodies, Aesthetics and Ethics.Jay Johnston - 2008 - Oakville, CT: Equinox Publishing.
    This is the first book to examine the Subtle Body- a model of subjectivity found in esoteric, eastern and western religious and philosophical traditions from a transdisciplinary and cross-cultural perspective. It considers this radical form of self as enabling an innovative reconsideration of the dualisms at the heart of western discourse: mind-body, divine-human, matter-spirit, reason-emotion, I-other. Emerging from this consideration is an interrelated aestheticethic that promotes an understanding of embodiment that is not exclusively tied to materiality. This perspective (...)
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  9.  4
    Angels of desire: esoteric bodies, aesthetics and ethics.Jay Johnston - 2008 - Oakville, CT: Equinox.
    Subtle bodies -- Difference -- Subtle subjects of desire -- "Seering" desire : the between -- Inhabiting sight -- Durée : the aesthetics of desired time -- An ethics of emptiness -- Witnessing : detached immersion -- An ethics of grace : the law of desiring angels -- Conclusion : the angelic ternary.
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  10.  23
    The farewell body: aesthetics of sickness and torture in finisecular Chile.Marcela Croce - 2016 - Estudios de Filosofía Práctica E Historia de Las Ideas 18:31-39.
    "El cuerpo es siempre un inconveniente", sostiene Susan Sontag sobre la convicción de que es antes un espacio de sufrimiento que de placer. Los avatares de la enfermedad trazan una taxonomía en la cual la responsabilidad del sujeto parece seleccionar las fallas orgánicas. Sobre la conducta irresponsable y apasionada de los travestis chilenos, Pedro Lemebel establece en Loco afán un catálogo de degradación corporal articulado con un lenguaje barroco. El efecto del SIDA en los años 80 y 90 sobre los (...)
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  11.  11
    Body aesthetics Sherri Irvin oxford university press, 2016; 330 pp; $74.00. [REVIEW]Vanessa Cimon-Lambert - 2018 - Dialogue 57 (4):899-901.
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  12. The Meaning of the Body: Aesthetics of Human Understanding by Mark Johnson.Charles Forceville - 2008 - Metaphor and Symbol 23 (4):292-297.
    Mark Johnson's new monograph pursues the research line of the earlier books he published, together with George Lakoff and on his own (Lakoff & Johnson, 1980, 1999; Johnson, 1987, 1993), but breaks...
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  13.  4
    Sherri Irvin, (ed). Body Aesthetics[REVIEW]Ninotchka Mumtaj Albano - 2018 - Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy (Philippine e-journal) 19 (1):107-117.
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  14.  38
    irvin, sherri, ed. Body Aesthetics. Oxford University Press, 2016, xvii + 330 pp., 34 b&w illus., $74.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Cynthia Freeland - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 76 (1):116-119.
    In this new anthology, Sherri Irvin has collected papers addressing a wide range of issues concerning the aesthetics of human bodies. As in the similar fields o.
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  15.  10
    The Meaning of the Body: Aesthetics of Human Understanding. [REVIEW]Lorenzo Magnani - 2010 - Isis 101:273-274.
  16.  78
    Embodied meaning and aesthetic experience: Mark Johnson, The meaning of the body. Aesthetics of human understanding. Chicago. University of Chicago Press, 2007. 276p, 2 color plates, 1 halftone, 2 line drawings, 4 figures, 6 musical examples. Cloth $32; ₤20 ISBN 0-226-40192-8.Richard Marc Shusterman - 2009 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 8 (2):261-265.
  17. Resisting Body Oppression: An Aesthetic Approach.Sherri Irvin - 2017 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 3 (4):1-26.
    Open Access: This article argues for an aesthetic approach to resisting oppression based on judgments of bodily unattractiveness. Philosophical theories have often suggested that appropriate aesthetic judgments should converge on sets of objects consensually found to be beautiful or ugly. The convergence of judgments about human bodies, however, is a significant source of injustice, because people judged to be unattractive pay substantial social and economic penalties in domains such as education, employment and criminal justice. The injustice is compounded by the (...)
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  18. Review of The Meaning of the Body: Aesthetics of Human Understanding. [REVIEW]Jennifer Mcmahon - 2009 - Mind 118 (471):843-846.
    In this clearly written and well argued book, Mark Johnson presents a theory of embodied cognition and discusses the implications it has for theories of meaning, language and aesthetics. His pragmatist foundations are on show when he writes that ‘The so-called norms of logical inference are just the patterns of thinking that we have discovered as having served us well in our prior inquiries, relative to certain values, purposes, and types of situations’ (p.109). Johnson’s particular contribution to theories of (...)
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  19.  22
    Andean aesthetics and anticolonial resistance: a cosmology of unsociable bodies.Omar Rivera - 2021 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Informed by Gloria Anzaldúa's and José Carlos Mariátegui's work, as well as by Andean cosmology, Omar Rivera turns to Inka stonework and architecture as an example of a "Cosmological Aesthetics." He articulates ways of sensing, feeling and remembering that are attuned to an aesthetic of water, earth and light. On this basis, Rivera brings forth a corporeal orientation that can be inhabited by the oppressed, one that withdraws from predominant modern/Western conceptions of the human. By providing an aesthetic analysis (...)
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  20.  22
    Body Image and Prosthetic Aesthetics: Disability, Technology and Paralympic Culture.Tomoko Tamari - 2017 - Body and Society 23 (2):25-56.
    The success of the London 2012 Paralympic Games not only revealed new public possibilities for the disabled, but also thrust the debates on the relationship between elite Paralympians and advanced prosthetic technology into the spotlight. One of the Paralympic stars, Oscar Pistorius, in particular became celebrated as ‘the Paralympian cyborg’. Also prominent has been Aimee Mullins, a former Paralympian, who became a globally successful fashion model by seeking to establish a new bodily aesthetic utilizing non-organic body parts. This article (...)
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  21.  14
    The aesthetics of emotion: up the down staircase of the mind-body.Gerald C. Cupchik - 2016 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    Argues that relations between mind and body are analogous to those between subject matter and style in art.
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  22.  4
    Mark Johnson. The Meaning of the Body: Aesthetics of Human Understanding. xviii + 308 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2007. $22.50. [REVIEW]Lorenzo Magnani - 2010 - Isis 101 (1):273-274.
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  23.  34
    Early body ornamentation as Ego-culture: Tracing the co-evolution of aesthetic ideals and cultural identity.Antonis Iliopoulos - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (232):187-233.
    While the “symbolic” meaning of early body ornamentation has received the lion’s share of attention in the debate on human origins, this paper sets out to explore their aesthetic and agentive dimensions, for the purpose of explaining how various ornamental forms would have led interacting groups to form a cultural identity of their own. To this end, semiotics is integrated with a new paradigm in the archaeology of mind, known as the theory of material engagement. Bridging specifically Peirce’s pragmatic (...)
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  24.  4
    Bodies of evidence: ethics, aesthetics, and politics of movement.Gurur Ertem & Sandra Noeth (eds.) - 2018 - Vienna: Passagen Verlag.
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  25.  68
    The body and its image in classical chinese aesthetics.Chengji Liu - 2008 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 3 (4):577-594.
    Richard Shusterman’s Pragmatist Aesthetics : Living Beauty, Rethinking Art was published in China in 2002. In the preface of the Chinese edition, the author claimed that his tentative idea of soma esthetics was encouraged by Chinese philosophy and other ancient Asian philosophy. Shusterman’s background in pragmatist philosophy greatly constrains his understanding of the body in classical Chinese aesthetics in that he only pays attention to the technical aspects of physical training while neglecting the philosophical basis of this (...)
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  26.  36
    Aesthetic surgery and the expressive body.Kathleen Lennon & Rachel Alsop - 2018 - Feminist Theory 19 (1):95-112.
    In this article, we explore the relation between bodies and selves evident in the narratives surrounding aesthetic surgery. In much feminist work on aesthetic surgery, such narratives have been discussed in terms of the normalising consequences of the objectifying, homogenising, cosmetic gaze. These discussions stress the ways in which we model our bodies, under the gaze of others, in order to conform to social norms. Such an objectified body is contrasted with the subjective body; the body-for-the-self. In (...)
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  27.  10
    Body, Sensuousness, Eros and the New Aesthetic Order from Schiller to Rushdie.Dana Bădulescu - 2013 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 3 (3):219-232.
    In the present article, I look into the culture-building power of Eros from Schiller’s ideas of “the aesthetic state of mind” in Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man, through the Pre-Raphaelites’ eroticism to the nineteenthcentury fin de siècle aestheticized homoeroticism and beyond. I argue that eroticism is a reaction to the increasing sense of alienation brought about by bourgeois modernity. The “moments” and texts used to illustrate the thesis that eroticism shaped an alternative order are far from exhausting a (...)
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  28.  16
    Two Body Criticism: A Genealogy of the Postmodern Anti-Aesthetic.John O'neill - 1994 - History and Theory 33 (1):61-78.
    Barbara Maria Stafford's Body Criticism is analyzed for its reliance upon monstrous bodies as the source of an alternative to the art history of the Enlightenment. A counterculture of the flesh caught in its own vision of skin diseases, bumps, and medical pathologies is painstakingly reproduced as the official opposition to reason's body. The art establishment is required to admit engravers, cartoonists, kaleidoscopists, and phrenologists. Critical questions are raised regarding Stafford's use of iconology and genealogy, as well as (...)
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  29.  14
    Psychedelic Aesthetics and the Body without Organs at the Limits of Perception.Patricia Pisters - 2023 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 17 (4):583-603.
    This article focuses on the aesthetics of the psychedelic experience. Aldous Huxley’s Doors of Perception remains one of the few studies that investigates the aesthetic dimension of the psychedelic experience as profoundly meaningful as such, because it gives direct attention to the nonhuman otherness of the universe that is hard to describe in words, but that can be felt and sensed. Similarly, Deleuze and Guattari have investigated psychedelics as a perceptual, aesthetic, phenomenon. They argue that psychedelic aesthetics offers (...)
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  30.  29
    Techno-aesthetic Thinking. Technicity and Symbolism in the Body.Anna Caterina Dalmasso - 2019 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 12 (1):69-84.
    This paper investigates the reciprocal implications between aesthetics and technics, to show how technicity, as a cultural and symbolic attitude, is constitutively rooted in the aesthetic dimension of human experience. The analysis conducted aims to bring into focus the originarity of technicity in the development of the living body, understood in its inseparable connection with the mind, as junction between the sensible and the symbolic, the organic and the cultural, the perceptive and the expressive. I address this question (...)
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  31.  3
    Two Body Criticism: A Genealogy of the Postmodern Anti-Aesthetic.John O' Neill - 1994 - History and Theory 33 (1):61.
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  32.  11
    Body, Brain, and Beauty: The Place of Aesthetics in the World of the Mind.Ken-Ichi Sasaki - 2012 - Diogenes 59 (1-2):41-51.
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  33.  3
    Ecology, Aesthetics and Daoist Body Cultivation.James Miller - 2014 - In J. Baird Callicott & James McRae (eds.), Environmental Philosophy in Asian Traditions of Thought. SUNY Press. pp. 225-243.
  34.  63
    The aesthetics of the body in the philosophy and art of the Middle Ages: text and image.Ricardo Luiz Silveira da Costa - 2012 - Trans/Form/Ação 35 (s1):161-178.
    A ideia de beleza - e sua consequente fruição estética - variou conforme as transformações das sociedades humanas, no tempo. Durante a Idade Média, coexistiram diversas concepções de qual era o papel do corpo na hierarquia dos valores estéticos, tanto na Filosofia quanto na Arte. Nossa proposta é apresentar a estética do corpo medieval que alguns filósofos desenvolveram em seus tratados (particularmente Isidoro de Sevilha, Hildegarda de Bingen, João de Salisbury, Bernardo de Claraval e Tomás de Aquino), além de algumas (...)
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  35.  61
    Bodies of Color, Bodies of Sorrow: On Resistant Sorrow, Aesthetic Unsettlement, and Becoming-With.Mariana Ortega - 2019 - Critical Philosophy of Race 7 (1):124-143.
    This article discusses sorrow in terms of its resistant possibilities. It describes bodies of color as ontological sites of sorrow in the context of racism and xenophobia. This sorrow, however, does not condemn these bodies to hopelessness and erasure. Rather, it may constitute a rupture with a present that fails to acknowledge racist and xenophobic practices. In addition, it connects sorrow to the kind of melancholia that bodies of color experience given their being-in-worlds that consider them unwanted, unworthy, and disposable. (...)
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  36.  21
    Aesthetic Turn: From Thinking as Noesis to Thinking as Listening to my Living Body.Hans Feger - 2017 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 2017 (2):133-148.
    That which I always already am, without having to do it - the transcendental status of corporeality - is prefigured in Nietzsche’s theory, according to which every authentic philosophy is first of all to be thought “under the guidance of the body.” Nietzsche criticized philosophy’s forgetting of the living body long before a phenomenological difference was made between the living body and the dimensional body; he proposed that thinking be based on differences and not on oppositions. (...)
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  37. Bodies, power and difference: Representations of the East-West divide in the comparative study of Indian aesthetics.Parul Dave-Mukherji - 2002 - Filozofski Vestnik 23 (2):205-220.
     
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  38.  19
    Disability aesthetics and the body beautiful: Signposts in the history of art.Tobin Siebers - 2008 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 2 (4):329-336.
    The discovery of fragmentary classical sculpture in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries reorients the making of art toward broken bodies, changing the nature of sculpture as an aesthetic form. But this category shift in the ideal of beauty also makes an opening for the emergence of disability aesthetics: the recognition that the disabled body becomes a valuable resource for the creation and appreciation of new art forms. The idea of disability aesthetics may be traced via disability signposts (...)
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  39. Chinese surplus: biopolitical aesthetics and the medically commodified body.Ari Larissa Heinrich - 2018 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    Biopolitical aesthetics and the Chinese body as surplus -- Chinese whispers : Frankenstein, the sleeping lion, and the emergence of a biopolitical aesthetics -- Souvenirs of the organ trade : the diasporic body in contemporary Chinese literature and art -- Organ economics: transplant, class, and witness from made in Hong Kong to the eye -- Still life : recovering (Chinese) ethnicity in the body worlds and beyond -- All rights preserved : intellectual property and the (...)
     
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  40.  64
    The Lived Body as Aesthetic Object in Anthropological Medicine.Wim Dekkers - 1999 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 2 (2):117-128.
    Medicine does not usually consider the human body from an aesthetic point of view. This article explores the notion of the lived body as aesthetic object in anthropological medicine, concentrating on the views of Buytendijk and Straus on human uprightness and gracefulness. It is argued that their insights constitute a counter-balance to the way the human body is predominantly approached in medicine and medical ethics. In particular, (1) the relationship between anthropological, aesthetic and ethical norms, (2) the (...)
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  41.  40
    The body of sublime knowledge: The aesthetic phenomenology of Arthur Schopenhauer.James Luchte - 2009 - Heythrop Journal 50 (2):228-242.
  42. Body, Brain, and Beauty: The Place of Aesthetics in the World of the Mind.Zdravko Radman - 2012 - Diogenes 59 (1-2):41-51.
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  43.  52
    Visions of the body. Embodied simulation and aesthetic experience.Vittorio Gallese - 2017 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 10 (1):41-50.
    The present contribution is mainly intended to illustrate how some recent discoveries in the field of neurosciences have revolutionized our ideas about perception, action and cognition, and how these new neuro-scientific perspectives can shed light on the human relationship to art and aesthetics, in the frame of an approach known as "experimental aesthetics". Experimental aesthetics addresses the problem of artistic images by investigating the brain-body physiological correlates of the aesthetic experience and human creativity, providing a perspective (...)
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  44.  31
    Aesthetics and the Embodied Mind: Beyond Art Theory and the Cartesian Mind–Body Dichotomy.Ştefan-Sebastian Maftei - 2016 - Studia Phaenomenologica 16:602-607.
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  45. The aesthetic presence of the body.Matthew Lipman - 1957 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 15 (4):425-434.
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  46.  26
    Body, Brain, and Beauty: The Place of Aesthetics in the World of the Mind.Zdravko Radman - 2012 - Diogenes 59 (1-2):41-51.
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  47. Controlling (mental) images and the aesthetic perception of racialized bodies.Adriana Clavel-Vazquez - forthcoming - Ergo.
    Aesthetic evaluations of human bodies have important implications for moral recognition and for individuals’ access to social and material goods. Unfortunately, there is a widespread aesthetic disregard for non-white bodies. Aesthetic evaluations depend on the aesthetic properties we regard objects as having. And it is widely agreed that aesthetic properties are directly accessed in our experience of aesthetic objects. How, then, might we explain aesthetic evaluations that systematically favour features associated with white identity? Critical race philosophers, like Alia Al-Saji, Mariana (...)
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  48.  46
    Learning to like it: Aesthetic perception of bodies, movements and choreographic structure.Guido Orgs, Nobuhiro Hagura & Patrick Haggard - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (2):603-612.
    Appreciating human movement can be a powerful aesthetic experience. We have used apparent biological motion to investigate the aesthetic effects of three levels of movement representation: body postures, movement transitions and choreographic structure. Symmetrical and asymmetrical sequences of apparent movement were created from static postures, and were presented in an artificial grammar learning paradigm. Additionally, “good” continuation of apparent movements was manipulated by changing the number of movement path reversals within a sequence. In an initial exposure phase, one group (...)
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  49.  14
    Performativity and Aesthetic Experience of the City. From the body of the fl'neur to the soma of the Man in Gold.Aurosa Alison - unknown
    In this essay, I do not want to focus on performativity as such and understand it as an aesthetic expression; instead, I would like to illustrate how performativity takes on the role consequential to an aesthetic experience. Specifically, I want to highlight how aesthetic experience takes place in the spatial contexts of the city. In this regard, I want to define the aesthetic-practical-sensory relationship of the soma, understood as a paradigm of a living body, that is, a body (...)
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  50.  9
    Bonaventure, the Body, and the Aesthetics of Salvation.Rachel Davies - 2019 - New York, New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this work of historical theology, Rachel Davies considers the relationship between aesthetics and anthropology in Bonaventure's thought, and shows how bodily diminishment can become a sign and source of the self's renewal. Drawing from texts like the Collations on the Six Days, and the Major Life of Francis, Davies reconfigures traditional accounts of the fallen body's rebellion against the soul and emphasizes instead the soul's original abandonment of the body. Her interpretation draws attention to the crucial (...)
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