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Both a vital theoretical work and a fine illustration of the principles and practice of sensory ethnography, this much anticipated translation is destined to figure as a major catalyst in the expanding field of sensory studies.
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Both a vital theoretical work and a fine illustration of the principles and practice of sensory ethnography, this much anticipated translation is destined to figure as a major catalyst in the expanding field of sensory studies.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Sensory Studies
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 158
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. April 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 276g
- ISBN-13: 9781472531964
- ISBN-10: 1472531965
- Artikelnr.: 40626997
- Sensory Studies
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 158
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. April 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 276g
- ISBN-13: 9781472531964
- ISBN-10: 1472531965
- Artikelnr.: 40626997
François Laplantine is Professor Emeritus of the University of Lyon 2, France and has an honorary doctorate from the Federal University of Salvador de Bahia, Brazil.Jamie Furniss is Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
The Extended Sensorium: Introduction to the Sensory and Social Thought of
François Laplantine, by David Howes, Concordia University,
CanadaTranslator's PrefacePrologue Chapter 1: The Brazilian Art of the
Ginga; Walking, Dancing, SingingChapter 2: The Choreographic ModelChapter
3: Pains and Pleasures of the Binary: The Dichotomy of Meaning and the
SensibleChapter 4: The Semantic ObsessionChapter 5: The Sensible, the
Social, Category and EnergyChapter 6: Two Precursors of an Anthropology of
the Sensible: Roger Bastide and Georges BatailleChapter 7: Living Together,
Feeling Together: Towards a Politics of the SensibleChapter 8: Sensible
Thought: Thinking Through the Body-Subject in MovementEpilogue in the Form
of Seven Propositions: Toward a Modal AnthropologySupplement: Sensing
TokyoNotesBibliographyIndex
François Laplantine, by David Howes, Concordia University,
CanadaTranslator's PrefacePrologue Chapter 1: The Brazilian Art of the
Ginga; Walking, Dancing, SingingChapter 2: The Choreographic ModelChapter
3: Pains and Pleasures of the Binary: The Dichotomy of Meaning and the
SensibleChapter 4: The Semantic ObsessionChapter 5: The Sensible, the
Social, Category and EnergyChapter 6: Two Precursors of an Anthropology of
the Sensible: Roger Bastide and Georges BatailleChapter 7: Living Together,
Feeling Together: Towards a Politics of the SensibleChapter 8: Sensible
Thought: Thinking Through the Body-Subject in MovementEpilogue in the Form
of Seven Propositions: Toward a Modal AnthropologySupplement: Sensing
TokyoNotesBibliographyIndex
The Extended Sensorium: Introduction to the Sensory and Social Thought of
François Laplantine, by David Howes, Concordia University,
CanadaTranslator's PrefacePrologue Chapter 1: The Brazilian Art of the
Ginga; Walking, Dancing, SingingChapter 2: The Choreographic ModelChapter
3: Pains and Pleasures of the Binary: The Dichotomy of Meaning and the
SensibleChapter 4: The Semantic ObsessionChapter 5: The Sensible, the
Social, Category and EnergyChapter 6: Two Precursors of an Anthropology of
the Sensible: Roger Bastide and Georges BatailleChapter 7: Living Together,
Feeling Together: Towards a Politics of the SensibleChapter 8: Sensible
Thought: Thinking Through the Body-Subject in MovementEpilogue in the Form
of Seven Propositions: Toward a Modal AnthropologySupplement: Sensing
TokyoNotesBibliographyIndex
François Laplantine, by David Howes, Concordia University,
CanadaTranslator's PrefacePrologue Chapter 1: The Brazilian Art of the
Ginga; Walking, Dancing, SingingChapter 2: The Choreographic ModelChapter
3: Pains and Pleasures of the Binary: The Dichotomy of Meaning and the
SensibleChapter 4: The Semantic ObsessionChapter 5: The Sensible, the
Social, Category and EnergyChapter 6: Two Precursors of an Anthropology of
the Sensible: Roger Bastide and Georges BatailleChapter 7: Living Together,
Feeling Together: Towards a Politics of the SensibleChapter 8: Sensible
Thought: Thinking Through the Body-Subject in MovementEpilogue in the Form
of Seven Propositions: Toward a Modal AnthropologySupplement: Sensing
TokyoNotesBibliographyIndex