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Anacarnation and Returning to the Lived Body with Richard Kearney [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Loyola Marymount University in California, USA), Edited by (European Center for the Study of War and Peace, Croatia)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 453 g
  • Sari: Psychology and the Other
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Oct-2022
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032259213
  • ISBN-13: 9781032259215
  • Formaat: Hardback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 453 g
  • Sari: Psychology and the Other
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-Oct-2022
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032259213
  • ISBN-13: 9781032259215
This edited collection responds to Richard Kearneys recent work on touch, excarnation, and embodiment, as well as his broader work in carnal hermeneutics, which sets the stage for his return to and retrieval of the senses of the lived body.

Here, fourteen scholars engage the breadth and depth of Kearneys work to illuminate our experience of the body. The chapters collected within take up a wide variety of subjects, from nature and non-human animals to our experience of the sacred and the demonic, and from arts account of touching to the political implications of various types of embodiment. Featuring also an inspired new reflection from Kearney himself, in which he lays out his vision for anacarnation, this volume is an important statement about the centrality of touch and embodiment in our experience, and a reminder that, despite the excarnating tendencies of contemporary life, the lived body remains a touchstone for wisdom in our increasingly complicated and fragile world.

Written for scholars and students interested in touch, embodiment, phenomenology, and hermeneutics, this diverse and challenging collection contributes to a growing field of scholarship that recognizes and attempts to correct the excarnating trends in philosophy and in culture at large.

Arvustused

"In the course of years of writing on imagination, hospitality, and touch, Richard Kearney has shown, in ways both philosophical and poetic, what it is to meet the world in a spirit of open-handed generosity. In this beautiful collection, we see a group of thinkers meeting strangers and horses, gods and trees; they encounter the living and the dead in the written word and the moving image, on the seashore and in the digital classroom, in the history of philosophy and in life lived in the flesh, all in that open spirit that reaches for empathy without presuming understanding. Thinking across generations and in the midst of many orders of being, they show us all over again that the world is not just before our eyes but at our fingertips. If we are paying attention, the extraordinary shines through the ordinary. This is an exercise in thinking together. Be warned; you will find yourself thinking with these writers long after you have closed the book."

Anne O'Byrne, Philosophy, Stony Brook University, USA

"If too many philosophers have colluded with a civilization out of touch with the lives, the bodies, the earth that make it upthis collection manifests an enlivening transdisciplinary alternative. Inspired by Richard Kearneys body of workin its adventures in embodiment, its refusal of the culture of discarnation, its revelatory 'anacarnation' and its oh-so-needed ecologythis conversation brilliantly unfolds the flesh of a radically hospitable hermeneutics."

Catherine Keller, George T. Cobb Professor of Constructive Theology, Drew University, The Theological School, USA

List of Contributors
x
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Re-touching Philosophy with Richard Kearney 1(10)
Brian Treanor
James L. Taylor
PART I Touching Nature
11(56)
1 Thinking Like a Jaguar: Carnal Hermeneutics, Touch, and the Limits of Language
13(19)
Brian Treanor
2 Sensing the Call of Other Animals: Carnal Hermeneutics, and the Ethico-Moral Imagination
32(17)
Melissa Fitzpatrick
3 The Embodied Human Being in Touch with the World: Richard Kearney, and Hedwig Conrad-Martius in Conversation
49(18)
Christina M. Gschwandtner
PART II Touching the Sacred
67(60)
4 Carnal Sacrality: Phenomenology, the Sacred, and Material Bodies in Richard Kearney
69(17)
Neal Deroo
5 Deep Calls to Deep
86(21)
Daniel O'Dea Bradley
6 Strangers, Gods, and Demons: Toward a Carnal Hermeneutics of the Demonic
107(20)
Brian Gregor
PART III Touching Imagination
127(50)
7 Earth Creatures: Anacarnation in an Excarnate Age
129(16)
M.E. Littlejohn
8 Richard Kearney, Terrence Malick, and the Hidden Life of Sense
145(18)
Christopher Yates
9 Kearney's Journey between Imagination, and Touch---in Dialogue with Ricoeur
163(14)
Eileen Brennan
PART IV Touching Flesh
177(54)
10 Anaskesis: Retrieving Flesh in an Age of Excarnation
179(15)
James L. Taylor
11 Female Nakedness in Protest: Tactile Reading
194(13)
Sarit Larry
12 Touch Thyself: Kearney's Anacarnational Return to Plato's Forgotten Wisdom
207(8)
Matthew Clemente
13 No Longer a Spectator Only
215(16)
Tamsin Jones
PART V Finishing Touches
231(26)
14 Anacarnation: Recovering Embodied Life
233(24)
Richard Kearney
Index 257
Brian Treanor is Professor of Philosophy and Charles S. Casassa SJ Chair at Loyola Marymount University in California, USA.

James L. Taylor is Professor of Philosophy and Peacemaking and Director of International Programs at the European Center for the Study of War and Peace.