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Un/knowing Bodies
Sociological Review Monographs
By Joanna Latimer (Edited by), Michael Schillmeier (Edited by)

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Format
Paperback, 277 pages
Published
United Kingdom, 27 April 2009

In this book, leading international authors from across the social science disciplines explore the contemporary re-theorizing of bodies as known, knowing and unknowing. The book presents cutting-edge research on ageing, disability, and biomedicine, together with original philosophical debates about the body and embodiment. It offers exciting and creative approaches to researching disembodiment and to the practice, organization, and conduct of care. It presents original exploration of contemporary theory and social philosophy on the body. It includes innovative and creative approaches to care and primary research in medicine, genetics, disability, and ageing studies.


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Product Description

In this book, leading international authors from across the social science disciplines explore the contemporary re-theorizing of bodies as known, knowing and unknowing. The book presents cutting-edge research on ageing, disability, and biomedicine, together with original philosophical debates about the body and embodiment. It offers exciting and creative approaches to researching disembodiment and to the practice, organization, and conduct of care. It presents original exploration of contemporary theory and social philosophy on the body. It includes innovative and creative approaches to care and primary research in medicine, genetics, disability, and ageing studies.

Product Details
EAN
9781405190831
ISBN
1405190833
Dimensions
22.6 x 15.2 x 1.5 centimetres (0.39 kg)

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: body, knowledge, worlds: Joanna Latimer (Cardiff University). Section I: Opening up the Body. 2. On the art of life: a vitalist reading of medical humanities: Monica Greco (Goldsmiths, University of London). 3. Unsettling bodies: Frida Khalo?s portraits and in/dividuality: Joanna Latimer (Cardiff University). 4. Bodily chiasms: Hugo Letiche (University for Humanistics Utrecht). Section II: Moving Worlds. 5. The body in time: knowing bodies and the ?interruption? of narrative: Rolland Munro and Olga Belova. 6. Telling silences: unspeakable trauma and the unremarkable practices of everyday life: Megan Warin (Durham University) and Simone Dennis (Australian National University). 7. Knowing body, knowing other: cultural materials and intensive care: Paul White (Cardiff University). Section III: Bodies & Technology. 8. Actor-networks of dementia: Michael Schillmeier (Ludwig-Maximilians University). 9. Washing and assessing: multiple diagnosis and hidden talents: Bernd Kraeftner (University for Applied Arts, Vienna) and Judith Kroell (University of Vienna). 10. Embodying autonomy in a Home Telecare service: Daniel Lopez (Universitat Oberta de Catalunya) and Miquel Domenech (Autonoma University, Barcelona). Section IV: Absences & Presences. 11. On psychology and embodiment: some methodological experiments: Steven D. Brown (University of Leicester) Paula Reavey (London South Bank University) John Cromby (Loughborough University) David Harper (University of East London) and Katherine Johnson (University of Brighton). 12. Bodily knowing as uncannily canny: clinical and ethical significance: Fiona K. O?Neill (Lancaster University). 13. Beyond caring? Discounting the differently known body: Trudy Rudge (University of Sydney). 14. Embodying loss and the puzzle of existence: Floris Tomasini (University of Central Lancashire). Index.

About the Author

Joanna Latimer is Reader at Cardiff University School of Social Sciences where she teaches cultural sociology, interpretative and post-structural social theory, and the social study of biomedicine, the body, health and illness. She has researched and published widely on older people, medicine, nursing, genetic science, materiality and meaning, and the politics of health care. More recently she has been researching non-human-human relations. Her publications include The Conduct of Care: Understanding Nursing Practice and two new books, The Gene, the Clinical and the Family: Diagnosing Dysmorphology, Reviving (Bio)medical Dominance and Horses, People and the Ordering of Relations . Michael Schillmeier teaches Sociology, Science and Technology Studies (STS), Disability Studies and Empirical Philosophy at the Department of Sociology at Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich, Germany. He received his PhD from Lancaster University/UK. He mainly writes on the material dynamics of societal ordering and change, cosmo-political events, on bodies/senses and dis/ability, on the societal relevance of objects and the heterogeneity of the social.

Reviews

"This makes for an exhilarating read . . . However for post-graduates with an interest in the body, sociologists and those whose work involves an academic interest in healthcare this book would provide a rewarding and challenging experience. " (Sociology of Health & Illness, 2010)

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