Written by leading social scientists working in and across a variety of analytic traditions, this ambitious, insightful volume explores interpretation as a focal metaphor for understanding the body’s influence, meaning, and matter in society.
Interpreting body and embodiment in social movements, health and medicine, race, sex and gender, globalization, colonialism, education, and other contexts, the book’s chapters call into question taken-for-granted ideas of where the self, the social world, and the body begin and end.
Encouraging reflection and opening new perspectives on theories of the body that cut through the classic mind/body divide, this is an important contribution to the literature on the body.
Tabla de materias
Introduction: Between Meaning and Matter – Anne Marie Champagne and Asia Friedman
1. Toward a Strong Cultural Sociology of the Body and Embodiment – Anne Marie Champagne
2. Thinking the Molecular – Ben Spatz
3. Interpreting Africa’s Seselelãme: Bodily Ways of Knowing in a Globalized World – Kathryn Linn Geurts and Sefakor Komabu-Pomeyie
4. Gender on the Post-Colony: Phenomenology, Race, and the Body in Nervous Conditions – Sweta Rajan-Rankin and Mrinalini Greedharry
5. Reinterpreting Male Bodies and Health in Crisis Times: From “Obesity” to Bigger Matters – Lee F. Monaghan
6. Beauty, Breasts, and Meaning after Mastectomy – Piper Sledge
7. “You Are Not the Body”: (Re)Interpreting the Body in and through Integral Yoga – Erin F. Johnston
8. Black Girls’ Bodies and Belonging in the Classroom – Brittney Miles
9. Embodied Vulnerability and Sensemaking with Solidarity Activists – Chandra Russo
10. Our Bodies, Our Disciplines, Our Selves – Annemarie Jutel
Sobre el autor
Asia Friedman is Associate Professor of sociology at the University of Delaware.