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El. knyga: Dynamic Embodiment for Social Theory: I move therefore I am

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This book presents a series of ontological investigations into an adequate theory of embodiment for the social sciences. Informed by a new realist philosophy of causal powers, it seeks to articulate a concept of dynamic embodiment, one that positions human body movement, and not just the body at the heart of theories of social action. It draws together several lines of thinking in contemporary social science: about the human body and its movements; adequate meta-theoretical explanations of agency and causality in human action; relations between moving and talking; skill and the formation of knowledge; metaphor, perception and the senses; movement literacy; the constitution of space and place, and narrative performance. This is an ontological inquiry that is richly grounded in, and supported by anthropological ethnographic evidence.

Using the work of Rom Harré, Roy Bhaskar, Charles Varela and Drid Williams this book applies causal powers theory to a revised ontology of personhood, and discusses why the adequate location of human agency is crucial for the social sciences. The breakthrough lies in fact that new realism affords us an account of embodied human agency as a generative causal power that is grounded in our corporeal materiality, thereby connecting natural/physical and cultural worlds.

Dynamic Embodiment for Social Theory is compelling reading for students and academics of the social sciences, especially anthropologists and sociologists of the body, and those interested in new developments in critical realism.
List of figures
x
Preface and acknowledgements xii
1 The primacy of movement
1(7)
2 The body in social theory
8(13)
3 A new ontology of personhood
21(13)
4 A methodological move: movement literacy
34(35)
5 Bourdieu's habitus: a sociological mislocation of agency
69(17)
6 Lakoff's and Johnson's metaphors: a psychological mislocation of agency
86(18)
7 Verbal and non-verbal: a linguistic mislocation of agency
104(14)
8 The ab(sense) of kinesthesia in Western thought
118(11)
9 Implications of dynamic embodiment for social theory
129(5)
Notes 134(8)
Bibliography 142(13)
Index 155
Brenda Farnell is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Illinois.