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About this book
The human body is not a given fact; it is not, as Descartes believed, a "machine made up of flesh and bones." The body is acquired, achieved, and learned. It is thus full of mimetic and mnemonic implications. The body remembers, and it does so in collectively relevant ways. Gestures, corporeal and phonetic rhythms, affective idioms, and emotional styles — perceptual, sensorial, motoric, and affective schemata — are all largely learned in shared social contexts.
These aspects of the embodied experience are often consigned to habit, to bodily automatisms, and to corporeal memories that reflect aspects of culture. But if the body reflects certain aspects of culture that press to become naturalized and organically attached to social actors, it also resists these kinds of cultural pressures. These adaptive and resistive dynamics, as this book shows, are not without consequences for individuals and groups. These processes can result in both advantages and disadvantages for social actors. They can take us toward certain futures while foreclosing others. It is therefore necessary to understand how, why, and to what extent corporeal memories are constructed but also resisted, modified, or created anew.
These aspects of the embodied experience are often consigned to habit, to bodily automatisms, and to corporeal memories that reflect aspects of culture. But if the body reflects certain aspects of culture that press to become naturalized and organically attached to social actors, it also resists these kinds of cultural pressures. These adaptive and resistive dynamics, as this book shows, are not without consequences for individuals and groups. These processes can result in both advantages and disadvantages for social actors. They can take us toward certain futures while foreclosing others. It is therefore necessary to understand how, why, and to what extent corporeal memories are constructed but also resisted, modified, or created anew.
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Yes, you can access Embodied Collective Memory by Rafael F. Narváez in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Philosophy & Mind & Body in Philosophy. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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Table of contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter One: The French Sociological Tradition
- Chapter Two: Pierre Bourdieu
- Chapter Three: Somatic Compliance, Somatic Deviance
- Chapter Four: Symbolic Violence vs. Creativity
- Chapter Five: Resistive Mechanisms (Phylogeny)
- Chapter Six: Basic Instincts: Eros and Thanatos
- Chapter Seven: The Subject (Ontogeny)
- Chapter Eight: Biology and Meaning (Phylogeny)
- Chapter Nine: Biology and Meaning (Ontogeny)
- Chapter Ten: Embodying the Past and Embodying the Future
- Chapter Eleven: An Example of Embodied Collective Memory: Race
- Chapter Twelve: Layers of ECMs
- Chapter Thirteen: External Features of ECMs
- Chapter Fourteen: Internal Features of ECMs
- Chapter Fifteen: Perceptual Collective Memory: The Eye
- Chapter Sixteen: The Role of Institutions
- Appendix: Psychoanalysis as a “Failed Science”
- References
- Index