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El. knyga: Paul Ricoeur and the Lived Body

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Paul Ricoeur and the Lived Body extends the scope of Paul Ricoeurs reflections and analyses of the body as ones own through explorations into the ethical, cultural, and affective dimensions of our corporeal existence. Starting with the fact that each of us has a place in the world by reason of our mode of incarnation as flesh, the contributors to this volume address a range of diverse themes in which the lived body figures. Edited by Roger W. H. Savage, this book investigates the construction of narrative identities and the social assignment of gender and race, the passions and an ethics of respect, affect theory, feeling, the carnal imagination, and the cultural and social milieu that comprises the conditions of our embodiment as subjects who have deeply held conditions and beliefs. That ones own body is also an object among objects is an invitation on the part of an objectifying attitude to overlook the reality of the experience of ones body as lived. By acknowledging that the lived body is irreducible to an object in the world, the essays in this volume have a common point: our assurance in acting and suffering is rooted in the mode of our incarnate existence as fragile yet capable human beings.
Acknowledgments vii
Foreword: The Swing Door of the Flesh ix
Richard Kearney
Introduction: Paul Ricoeur, the Lived Body, and an Ontology of the Flesh xvii
Roger W. H. Savage
1 Transcending the Duality of Body and Language: Ricoeur's Notion of Narrative Identity
1(16)
Annemie Halsema
2 Passions, Imagination, and Ethical Consideration of the Other
17(24)
Gaelle Fiasse
3 The Body, Mortality, and History: Paul Ricoeur's Critical Reading of the Phenomenologies of the Body
41(20)
Anne Gleonec
4 Theorizing the Exchange between the Self and the World: Paul Ricoeur, Affect Theory, and the Body
61(22)
Stephanie Arel
5 Feeling, Interiority, and the Musical Body
83(26)
Roger W. H. Savage
6 From the Carnal Imagination to a Carnal Theory of Symbols
109(18)
Scott Davidson
7 Culture as the Necessary Extension of Bodily Being
127(26)
Timo Helenius
8 Paul Ricoeur's Phenomenological Diagnostic of the Body: Being Corporally Situated in the Sociohistorical World
153(22)
Maria Cristina Clorinda Vendra
9 Ideology on the Ground: Ricoeur on Embodiment and Ideology Critique
175(22)
Dan R. Stiver
Index 197(6)
About the Contributors 203
Roger W. H. Savage is professor of musicology and philosophy at the University of California.