The Emancipatory Power of the Body in Everyday Life: Niches of Liberation

Springer Verlag (2023)
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has powerfully highlighted the tight knot of bodiliness and politics. This relationship lies at the heart of this book. The author explores how events in everyday life take on a deeply political dimension, and how the body becomes a site of political practice. Subject to regulation, the body functions as a vehicle of oppressive social influences, and has been studied as such by philosophers within the framework of biopolitics. However, the body is also a locus of resistance and rebellion against the entrenched rules, a quality which the author refers to as somapower. The revolt of the body usually begins and develops beyond political spaces – in emancipatory cultural niches, which may gradually accrue political resonance. While this microphysics of emancipation, with its potential for remodeling political life, is particularly important in authoritarian and totalitarian regimes, it is also a relevant force in democracies, where it may foster social change.

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Chapters

Conclusions

Conclusions provide final reflections on the issues discussed in the book and some possible ways to develop them in the future.

The Pandemic and the Politics of the Body

This chapter focuses on the social, political, and cultural consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic is viewed as a liminal case of the politics of the body, given the radical restrictions imposed on bodies in its wake. Two interpretive frameworks—biopower and somaesthetics—are contrastiv... see more

Concepts: Somapower, the Microphysics of Emancipation, and the Politics of Everyday Life

This chapter explains and discusses the main concepts that underpin my argument in the book. First, the relationship between everyday life and politics is explained in the context of the distinction between politics and the political. Subsequently, the key notions of the microphysics of emancipation... see more

Applications: Everyday Life, the Body, and Strategies of Resistance

This chapter shows how the concepts defined in Chap. 1 work and can be analytically applied. In the first part, niches of emancipation in authoritarian regimes and liberal democracies are explored. The second part offers two extended examples: one presents emancipation through artistic pursuits in c... see more

Similar books and articles

The everyday life reader.Ben Highmore (ed.) - 2002 - New York: Routledge.
Reclaiming Our Bodies: Towards a Sentient Pedagogy of Liberation.Sherry Badger Taylor - 1991 - Dissertation, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Routines and Concerns in Conduct of Everyday Life.Lisbeth Hybholt - 2015 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 16 (2):88-102.

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