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Embodied Difference: Divergent Bodies in Public Discourse [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 268 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x159x22 mm, weight: 576 g, 11 BW Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Feb-2019
  • Leidėjas: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1498563864
  • ISBN-13: 9781498563864
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 268 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 231x159x22 mm, weight: 576 g, 11 BW Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Feb-2019
  • Leidėjas: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1498563864
  • ISBN-13: 9781498563864
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Focusing on the body as a visual and discursive platform across public space, we study marginalization as a sociocultural practice and hegemonic schema. Whereas mass incarceration and law enforcement readily feature in discussions of institutionalized racism, we differently highlight understudied sites of normalization and exclusion. Our combined effort centers upon physical contexts (skeletons, pageant stages, gentrifying neighborhoods), discursive spaces (medical textbooks, legal battles, dance pedagogy, vampire narratives) and philosophical arenas (morality, genocide, physician-assisted suicide, cryonic preservation, transfeminism) to deconstruct seemingly intrinsic connections between body and behavior, Whiteness and normativity.

Recenzijos

Embodied Difference: Divergent Bodies in Public Discourse is a refreshingly interdisciplinary consideration of embodiment as a site of agency, oppression, and knowledge production. It is all too easy, in the face of Western societys enculturated somatophobia, to forget that our bodies are a matrix of sense receptors caught in a web of political constructs; that through the body we both experience and are experienced by the world. As such, the body is intrinsic to the formation of self, other, community, and culture. This text incites a welcome and timely discourse, which honors our lived experience, by making explicit the connections between our corporeal flesh and our cultural foundations. -- Catherine Cabeen, Marymount Manhattan College While intersectional feminist theory has captured the attention of numerous scholar/activists throughout the U.S. academy and beyond, rarely has it been so brilliantly operationalized as is the case in this cross-disciplinary, co-edited anthology. The broad range of themes is breathtaking scientific racism, transfeminism, American dance, urban development/gentrification, sci-fi films, right-to-die cases, Gray's Anatomy, the relentlessness of racial inequality. Professors Jamie A. Thomas and Christina Jackson have assembled a diverse group of experts whose provocative explorations of the causes and consequences of social inequality over time make visible in new ways the challenges and dangers we now face in the aftermath of a deeply polarizing 2016 Presidential election. -- Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Anna J. Cooper Professor of Comparative Womens Studies at Spelman College and co-author of GENDER TALK: THE STRUGGLE FOR WOMENS EQUALITY IN AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITIES

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: Approaching the Body through Public-facing Scholarship in Philadelphia 1(18)
UNIT ONE THE RATIONAL MIND VS. THE CRIMINAL BODY
Preface to Unit One
19(2)
1 Our Own Flesh and Blood: Putting the Body at the Center of Violence and Dehumanization
21(16)
Krista K. Thomason
2 Are We Our Brains? How Early Christianity Shaped Western Ideas About Power, Morality, and Personhood
37(22)
Jessica Wright
3 Making the Case for Transfeminism: The Activist Philosophies of CeCe McDonald and Angela Davis
59(16)
Ute Bettray
UNIT TWO THE DEVIANT AND UNDESIRABLE BODY
Preface to Unit Two
75(2)
4 Bias, Brains, and Skulls: Tracing the Legacy of Scientific Racism in the Nineteenth-Century Works of Samuel George Morton and Friedrich Tiedemann
77(22)
Paul Wolff Mitchell
John S. Michael
5 Female Vampires as Embodied Critiques of Heteronormativity, Blood-Mixing, and Patriarchy: From Carmilla to Fledgling
99(20)
Dorisa Costello
6 Protest Bodies: The Right to Protect Your Own in Environmental Justice and Redevelopment Battles
119(18)
Christina Jackson
7 Death and the Power of the Young Female Body: Iconic Legal Cases
137(28)
Barry R. Furrow
UNIT THREE THE BEAUTIFUL BODY AND ITS PARTS
Preface to Unit Three
165(2)
8 Medicine's Cultural Power: The Textbook Case of Gray's Anatomy
167(16)
Emily August
9 "Tuck in Your Derriere": Butts and Bodies in Ballet and Tap
183(18)
Kat Richter
10 The Year Is 2093: Reanimation from Frankenstein to Prometheus as Sci-fi Metaphor for (Dis)Embodied Female Futures and Colonization of Space
201(38)
Jamie A. Thomas
Index 239(18)
About the Contributors 257
Jamie A. Thomas is assistant professor of linguistics at Swarthmore College.

Christina Jackson is assistant professor of sociology at Stockton University.