Results for 'the body in art'

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  1.  13
    The body in sound, music and performance: studies in audio and sonic arts.Linda O'Keeffe & Isabel Nogueira (eds.) - 2022 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    The Body in Sound, Music and Performance brings together cutting-edge contributions from women working on and researching contemporary sound practice. This highly interdisciplinary book features a host of international contributors and places emphasis on developments beyond the western world, including movements growing across Latin America. Within the book, the body is situated as both the site and centre for knowledge making and creative production. Chapters explore how insightful theoretical analysis, new methods, innovative practises, and sometimes within the socio-cultural (...)
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  2. The body in pain: the making and unmaking of the world.Elaine Scarry - 1985 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Part philosophical meditation, part cultural critique, The Body in Pain is a profoundly original study that has already stirred excitement in a wide range of intellectual circles. The book is an analysis of physical suffering and its relation to the numerous vacabularies and cultural forces--literary, political, philosophical, medical, religious--that confront it. Elaine Scarry bases her study on a wide range of sources: literature and art, medical case histories, documents on torture compiled by Amnesty International, legal transcripts of personal injury (...)
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  3.  29
    The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World.Elaine Scarry - 1985 - New York: Oxford University Press USA.
    Part philosophical meditation, part cultural critique, The Body in Pain is a profoundly original study that has already stirred excitement in a wide range of intellectual circles. The book is an analysis of physical suffering and its relation to the numerous vocabularies and cultural forces--literary, political, philosophical, medical, religious--that confront it.Elaine Scarry bases her study on a wide range of sources: literature and art, medical case histories, documents on torture compiled by Amnesty International, legal transcripts of personal injury trials, (...)
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  4.  10
    Learning theory of the body in arts: With regard to the discipline and mimesis.Yuhi Nakazawa - 2014 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport and Physical Education 36 (2):83-96.
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  5.  1
    Art, science and the body in early Romanticism.Stephanie O'Rourke - 2021 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Can we really trust the things our bodies tell us about the world? This book reveals how deeply intertwined cultural practices of art and science questioned the authority of the human body in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Focusing on Henry Fuseli, Anne-Louis Girodet, and Philippe de Loutherbourg, it argues that Romantic artworks participated in a widespread crisis concerning the body as a source of reliable scientific knowledge. Rarely discussed sources and new archival material illuminate how (...)
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  6. The Body in the Mind: The Bodily Basis of Meaning, Imagination, and Reason.Mark Johnson - 1987 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    "There are books—few and far between—which carefully, delightfully, and genuinely turn your head inside out. This is one of them. It ranges over some central issues in Western philosophy and begins the long overdue job of giving us a radically new account of meaning, rationality, and objectivity."—Yaakov Garb, _San Francisco Chronicle_.
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  7.  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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  8.  25
    The body in between, the dissociative experience of trauma.Anna Walker - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (3):315-322.
    In ‘The autonomy of the affect’ Brian Massumi wrote of the gap between affective and cognitive registering of the traumatic experience. Affect theorists and neuroscientists have long shared the notion of a gap between the somatic response to a traumatic event and the appraisal of the affective situation. This article develops theories on dissociation or nothingness, where nothingness is a measurement of the space between the affective and the cognitive registering of a traumatic event. It explores the concept of two (...)
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  9.  10
    The body in theory: essays after Lacan and Foucault.Becky Renee McLaughlin & Benjamin Eric Daffron (eds.) - 2021 - Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
    "The body has always had the potential to unsettle us with its strange exigencies and suppurations, its demands and desires, and thus throughout the ages, it has continued to be a subject of interest and obsession. This collection of twelve peer-reviewed essays on Jacques Lacan and Michel Foucault interrogates the body in all of its beauty...and with all of its blights and blemishes. Written by a diverse body of scholars-art historians, cultural theorists, English professors, philosophers, psychoanalysts, and (...)
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  10. Art, Desire and the Body in Ancient Greece. By Andrew Stewart.L. Garland - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (4):537-538.
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  11.  42
    The Body in the Mind: The Bodily Basis of Meaning, Imagination, and Reason.Mark Johnson - 1989 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 47 (4):400-401.
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  12.  18
    The Art of the Body in the Discourse of Postmodernity.Roy Boyne - 1988 - Theory, Culture and Society 5 (2-3):527-542.
  13.  23
    Iconicity and indexicality: The body in Chinese art.David Clarke - 2005 - Semiotica 2005 (155.1part4):229-248.
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  14.  13
    Iconicity and indexicality: The body in Chinese art.David Clarke - 2005 - Semiotica 2005 (155):229-248.
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  15.  12
    Emotions and The Body in Buddhist Contemplative Practice and Mindfulness-Based Therapy: Pathways of Somatic Intelligence.Padmasiri de Silva - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book represents an outstanding contribution to the field of somatic psychology. It focuses on the relationship between body and emotions, and on the linkages between mindfulness-based emotion studies and neuroscience. The author discusses the awakening of somatic intelligence as a journey through pain and trauma management, the moral dimensions of somatic passions, and the art and practice of embodied mindfulness. Issues such as the emotions and the body in relation to Buddhist contemplative practice, against the background of (...)
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  16.  19
    Gendered Bodies in Contemporary Chinese Art.Mary Bittner Wiseman - 2013 - In Peg Brand Weiser (ed.), Beauty Unlimited. Indiana University Press. pp. 385-405.
    The idea of beauty in the West has often been connected with the idea of woman, whose beauty has been celebrated in sculptures of the nude since classical Greece and in paintings since the sixteenth century. the nude is not a genre in either traditional or contemporary Chinese art, however, and although there has been nakedness in the representations of the body in the contemporary art of China, its presence is marked by two characteristics that distance the Chinese naked (...)
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  17.  27
    The world in my body, the ‘other’ in my soul: Living at risk in a moistmedia art ecology.Cristina Miranda de Almeida - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (1-2):67-83.
    The main notion of this article is that the blurring of the limits between offline and online dimensions of knowledge and experience, in addition to the manipulation of genes, neurons, atoms and bits, is dissolving the distinction between subjectivism (i.e. idealism) and materialism (i.e. objectivism and realism). As a consequence, in the moistmedia (from Ascott) ecology in which we are increasingly immersed, a radical kind of experience of matter, time, space and self is emerging. In this form of experience, the (...)
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  18.  27
    The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, From Vienna 1900 to the Present.Eric Kandel - 2011 - Random House.
    A psychoanalytic psychology and art of unconscious emotion -- An inward turn : Vienna 1900 -- Exploring the truths hidden beneath the surface : origins of a scientific medicine -- Viennese artists, writers, and scientists meet in the Zuckerkandl Salon -- Exploring the brain beneath the skull : origins of a scientific psychiatry -- Exploring mind together with the brain : the development of a brain-based psychology -- Exploring mind apart from the brain : origins of a dynamic psychology -- (...)
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  19.  57
    Transcendence with the Human Body in Art. [REVIEW]Martin Moleski - 1996 - Tradition and Discovery 23 (2):37-39.
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  20.  1
    Naked Authority: The Body in Western Art 1830–1908. [REVIEW]Gillian Elinor - 1993 - Feminist Review 43 (1):97-100.
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  21. The Body of a Human, Transhuman and Posthuman in Modern Art in the Context of Naturalness and Artificiality with Reference to Gernot Bohme\'s Philosophy and Aesthtetic of the Body'.Wioletta Kazimierska-Jerzyk - 2005 - Art Inquiry. Recherches Sur les Arts 7:69-84.
     
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  22.  6
    Psychic treats and somatic shelters: attuning to the body in contemporary psychoanalytic dialogue.Nitza Yarom - 2015 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    There is increasing recognition within psychoanalysis and related therapies that awareness of the body is important in understanding and treating patients. Psychic Threats and Somatic Shelters explores the ways in which adults and children become acquainted with the range of physical issues that arise within their psychoanalytic or psychological treatments. Nitza Yarom discusses in a practical and clinically focused way the large variety of physical outlets which today's person uses to shelter from the many troubles and restrictions that are (...)
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  23.  86
    The nature of art: an anthology.Thomas E. Wartenberg (ed.) - 2002 - Fort Worth: Harcourt College.
    THE NATURE OF ART is a collection of 29 seminal, historically-organized readings that are focused on a basic philosophical question: What is Art? Including writings from the Western tradition'both Continental and Analytic traditions'as well as non-Western, minority, and feminist writings, this volume provides students with a rich set of resources to explore this matter both broadly and deeply. Introductions to each reading situate the selection amidst each respective thinker's body of work and the greater philosophical context in which the (...)
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  24.  2
    Resonant bodies in contemporary European art cinema.Emilija Talijan - 2022 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    The body at close range: volume and the unlistenable in Catherine Breillat's Anatomy of Hell -- Sonic subjection: Gaspar Noé's Irreversible and the dystopian limits of the resonant body -- A stranger everywhere: the écho-monde of Tony Gatlif's Exiles -- Feedback, asynchronicity, and sonic sociabilities: Arnaud des Pallière's Adieu -- Listening at the limit: non-human noise in Lars von Trier's Antichrist -- Listening to things: Foley as "alien phenomenology" and Peter Strickland's Berberian sound studio.
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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 training. In (...)
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  26.  5
    Equivocations of the body and cosmic arts: An experiment in polyrealism.Peter Skafish - 2020 - Angelaki 25 (4):135-148.
    Are techniques of the body always of the body, and in what sense are they techniques? A response to Yuk Hui’s The Question Concerning Technology in China, this essay takes the techniques of traditi...
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  27.  10
    The Artificial Body in Fashion and Art: Marionettes, Models, and Mannequins by Adam Geczy.Elizabeth Wissinger - 2017 - Utopian Studies 28 (3):666-671.
    Readers of Geczy's book are in for a wild ride. The lavishly illustrated narrative moves in broad strokes from the commedia dell'arte to cyborgs, with gross-out plastic surgery disasters and live sex dolls in between. The book's premise is simple: where humans once found their humanity in separating themselves from the artificial, in our current technologically infused age, humans want more than anything to become as artificial as possible. Geczy puts it simply: "In the humanist age, Pinocchio wanted to become (...)
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  28. Pamela H. Smith: The Body of the Artisan: Art and Experience in the Scientific Revolution.S. Ducheyne - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 13 (3):575.
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  29.  20
    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 in which (...)
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  30. Two conceptions of the body in Plato's Phaedrus.Maria Angelica Flerro - 2013 - In G. Boys-Stones, C. Gill & D. El-Murr (eds.), The Platonic Art of philosophy. Cambridge University Press.
     
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  31.  2
    Offering the Body: Performing proximity in the use of cellular material.Louise Mackenzie - 2020 - Technoetic Arts 18 (2):197-204.
    Cellular and sub-cellular material become creative medium across a range of disciplines that engage with biotechnology, from medicine to art practice. Historically, these practices complicated the boundaries of the body through patriarchal and colonial narratives of abstraction and extraction. In contrast to the ethical requirements of anonymity in medical research, this article suggests that material culture has a duty to know the body it works with. Three brief histories of bodily donation are recounted and aspects of these are (...)
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  32.  34
    To perform the layered body—a short exploration of the body in performance.Helena De Preester - 2007 - Janus Head: Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature, Continental Philosophy, Phenomenological Psychology, and the Arts 9 (2):349-383.
    The aim of this article is to focus on the body as instrument or means in performance-art. Since the body is no monolithic given, the body is approached in terms of its constitutive layers, and this may enable us to conceive of the mechanisms that make performances possible and operational, i.e. those bodily mechanisms that are implicitly or explicitly controlled or manipulated in performance. Of course, the exploitation of these bodily layers is not solely responsible for the (...)
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  33. "Bodies of Knowledge: The Psychological Significance of the Nude in Art": Liam Hudson. [REVIEW]Gillian M. Mayes - 1984 - British Journal of Aesthetics 24 (1):91.
     
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  34.  7
    The Political Body in Chinese Art.Curtis Carter - unknown
  35. Evolution of the Body. Orlan\'s Carnal Art in Relation to Body Art.Joanna Krawczyk - 2005 - Art Inquiry. Recherches Sur les Arts 7:199-216.
     
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  36.  17
    Ancient art and gender issues - †(r.J.) Barrow gender, identity and the body in greek and Roman sculpture. Prepared for publication by Michael silk with the assistance of jaś elsner, Sebastian Matzner and Michael Squire. Pp. XVIII + 225, ills. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2018. Cased, £75, us$105. Isbn: 978-1-107-03954-4. [REVIEW]Seth Estrin - 2019 - The Classical Review 69 (2):605-607.
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  37. Bodies in skilled performance: how dancers reflect through the living body.Camille Buttingsrud - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):7535-7554.
    Dancers and dance philosophers report on experiences of a certain form of sense making and bodily thinking through the dancing body. Yet, discussions on expertise and consciousness are often framed within canonical philosophical world-views that make it difficult to fully recognize, verbalize, and value the full variety of embodied and affective facets of subjectivity. Using qualitative interviews with five professional dancers and choreographers, I make an attempt to disclose the characteristics of what I consider to be a largely overseen (...)
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  38.  21
    Pamela H. Smith. The Body of the Artisan: Art and Experience in the Scientific Revolution. x + 367 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. $35. [REVIEW]William Eamon - 2006 - Isis 97 (1):159-161.
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  39.  18
    Religion and the subtle body in Asia and the West: between mind and body.Geoffrey Samuel & Jay Johnston (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    Subtle-body practices are found particularly in Indian, Indo-Tibetan and East Asian societies, but have become increasingly familiar in Western societies, especially through the various healing and yogic techniques and exercises associated with them. This book explores subtle-body practices from a variety of perspectives, and includes both studies of these practices in Asian and Western contexts. The book discusses how subtle-body practices assume a quasi-material level of human existence that is intermediate between conventional concepts of body and (...)
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  40.  3
    The politics of baring the body in nationalist and feminist protest in Egypt (1882-1956). [REVIEW]Florie Bavard - 2021 - Clio 54:101-127.
    Du début du xxe siècle aux années 1950, en Égypte, le geste de se dénuder se politise. Cet article s’intéresse à la façon dont des militantes et artistes mobilisent le dénudement dans leurs répertoires d’actions et dans leurs stratégies rhétoriques à des fins nationalistes ou féministes. Cette recherche propose ainsi un panorama chrono-thématique des questions relatives à la corporalité féminine, mises au-devant de la scène par ces femmes engagées. Des années 1900 aux années 1920, l’étude se focalise sur les corps (...)
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  41.  19
    The play of life in art.Chad Engelland - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 2 (2):127-142.
    Bodily expression of affection through movement is both simple and complex: simple insofar as it puts us into immediate communion with the affective lives of others; complex insofar as it relies on rapid and subtle movements that generally escape explicit notice. The difficulty in understanding the bodily basis of intersubjectivity comes in understanding how in and through complex movement the simplicity of expression is possible. It is here that reflection on the arts proves valuable. Hans-Georg Gadamer points to the role (...)
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  42.  16
    The Body, Self-Cultivation, and Ki-Energy.Yasuo Yuasa - 1993 - SUNY Press.
    This book is an inquiry into ki-energy, its role within Eastern mind-body theory, and its implications for our contemporary Western understanding of the body. Yuasa examines the concept of ki-energy as it has been used in such areas as acupuncture, Buddhist and Taoist meditation, and the martial arts. To explain the achievement of mind-body oneness in these traditions he offers an innovative schematization of the lived body. His approach is interdisciplinary and cross-cultural, offering insights into Western (...)
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  43.  17
    Disequilibrium in the mind, disharmony in the body.Sidney D'Mello, Rick Dale & Art Graesser - 2012 - Cognition and Emotion 26 (2):362-374.
  44.  40
    The gendered body in Roman sculpture - Davies gender and body language in Roman art. Pp. XII + 357, ills. Cambridge: Cambridge university press, 2018. Cased, £90, us$120. Isbn: 978-0-521-84273-0. [REVIEW]Lindsey A. Mazurek - 2019 - The Classical Review 69 (1):284-286.
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  45. This Body of Art: The Singular Plural of the Feminine.Helen A. Fielding - 2005 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 36 (3):277-292.
    I explore the possibility that the feminine, like art, can be thought in terms of Jean-Luc Nancy’s concept of the singular plural. In Les Muses, Nancy claims that art provides for the rethinking of a technë not ruled by instrumentality. Specifically, in rethinking aesthetics in terms of the debates laid out by Kant, Hegel and Heidegger, he resituates the ontological in terms of the specificity of the techniques of each particular artwork; each artwork establishes relations particular to its world or (...)
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  46.  9
    Medicine and the heavens in Padua's Faculty of Arts, 1570–1630.Craig Martin - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-15.
    In the faculty of arts at the University of Padua in the years around 1600 professors debated the reliability of astrology, the existence of occult celestial influences, and the idea that celestial heat is present in living bodies. From the 1570s to the 1620s many professors in the faculty of arts pushed back against astrology and Jean Fernel's theories surrounding astral body. Girolamo Mercuriale, Alessandro Massaria and Eustachio Rudio thought that some forms of astral causation and Fernel's ideas were (...)
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  47. 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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  48.  6
    Reconsidering the life of power: ritual, body, and art in critical theory and Chinese philosophy.James Garrison - 2021 - Albany: Suny Press.
    Offers a compelling intercultural perspective on body, art, self, and society.
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  49. The Body, Thought Experiments, and Phenomenology.Yiftach J. H. Fehige & Harald Wiltsche - 2012 - In Thought Experiments in Philosophy, Science, and the Arts.
    An explorative contribution to the ongoing discussion of thought experiments. While endorsing the majority view that skepticism about thought experiments is not well justified, in what follows we attempt to show that there is a kind of “bodiliness” missing from current accounts of thought experiments. That is, we suggest a phenomenological addition to the literature. First, we contextualize our claim that the importance of the body in thought experiments has been widely underestimated. Then we discuss David Gooding's work, which (...)
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  50.  66
    Dialectics of the body: corporeality in the philosophy of T.W. Adorno.Lisa Yun Lee - 2005 - New York: Routledge.
    The aim of this book is to understand what Deleuze and Guattari mean by "art." Stephen Zepke argues that art, in their account, is an ontological term and an ontological practice that results in a new understanding of aesthetics. For Deleuze and Guattari understanding what art "is" means understanding how it works, what it does, how it "becomes," and finally, how it lives. This book illuminates these philosophers' discussion of ontology from the viewpoint of art-and vice versa-in a thorough questioning (...)
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