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E-raamat: Human Rights and the Body: Hidden in Plain Sight

(Leicester University, UK)
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Human Rights and the Body is a response to the crisis in human rights, to the very real concern that without a secure foundation for the concept of human rights, their very existence is threatened. While there has been consideration of the discourses of human rights and the way in which the body is written upon, research in linguistics has not yet been fully brought to bear on either human rights or the body. Drawing on legal concepts and aspects of the law of human rights, Mooney aims to provide a universally defensible set of human rights and a foundation, or rather a frame, for them. She argues that the proper frames for human rights are firstly the human body, seen as an index reliant on the natural world, secondly the globe and finally, language. These three frames generate rights to food, water, sleep and shelter, environmental protection and a right against dehumanization. This book is essential reading for researchers and graduate students in the fields of human rights and semiotics of law.

Arvustused

Bare, embodied life, traditionally conceived of as pre-political and pre-legal, emerges in Annabelle Mooneys sensitive account as the very origin and index of being human, and hence as the only proper foundation for a truly universal set of basic human rights. The thinking enacted in this brilliant book will be a welcome contribution to the debate about universalism versus cultural relativism in the theory of human rights. Louis E. Wolcher, University of Washington, Seattle, USA Annabelle Mooneys book is a landmark in the literature on human rights and our common humanity. Importantly, the main stress here is not so much on rights as on human. The two main reference points are the vulnerable human body and universal human concepts. This is novel and revealing. Highly recommended. Anna Wierzbicka, Australian National University, Australia By moving away from strictly defined aspects to what Dr Mooney refers to as Bare Human Rights, she helps us to look deeper into the human condition from a perspective of disenfranchisement and de-humanizing the other. Human Rights and the Body is at once thought-provoking and holistic in its approach to human rights. As corporate and political globalization marginalizes more and more of our worlds population, this is a timely text which should be read by those in the fields of world politics, law and business. Jack B. Hamlin, National University, USA What a bold and inspiring book, refreshingly disrespectful of the traditional boundaries between disciplines. Straddling philosophy, law and linguistics, the book invites us to reflect not only on human rights and the body, but effectively on the human condition itself. Gerlinde Mautner, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria

List of Tables
ix
Acknowledgements xi
Introduction: We Were Promised Jet Packs 1(6)
1 Universals and Foundations
7(36)
Universality of Human Rights
10(3)
Culture and Human Rights
13(5)
(Anti) Foundations
18(7)
The Current System
25(5)
The Origin of Human Rights
30(3)
Humane Models
33(5)
The Human
38(3)
Conclusion
41(2)
2 The Blinded Body
43(24)
Bodies of Data
45(1)
The Fields
46(5)
Breaching, Balancing and the Monster
51(8)
Particular Human Rights
59(1)
The Singular Human Right
60(4)
Frames
64(2)
Conclusion
66(1)
3 The Body
67(20)
Real Bodies
69(5)
The Absent Body
74(4)
Searching for the Soul of the Body
78(5)
Conclusion
83(4)
4 The Body, the Index and the Other
87(28)
The Body and the World
88(2)
Before the Zero Institution
90(2)
This is My Body
92(3)
The Body as Index
95(4)
Is and Ought
99(3)
Bodies in the World: Climate Theory
102(3)
Homo Sacer
105(3)
The Other
108(7)
5 The Living Body
115(26)
Water as a Human Right
117(2)
Plachimada: People and Property
119(5)
Thirsty Corporations
124(1)
Money and Sense
125(5)
The Public Trust
130(3)
Roman Law
133(2)
Anticipatory Negligence
135(2)
Trust and the Political Order
137(2)
A Coda
139(2)
6 The Embodied Mind
141(22)
The Body and the Mind
143(2)
Metaphor
145(2)
Thought, Feeling and Space
147(4)
What is Universal?
151(4)
Bad Biology
155(3)
Step Outside
158(5)
7 The Linguistic Body
163(31)
Natural Semantic Metalanguage
164(8)
NSM and Human Rights
172(5)
Dehumanisation
177(3)
What Makes Us Inhuman?
180(12)
Root Causes
192(2)
Conclusion 194(3)
Conclusion: Three Rights and Three Frames 197(4)
References 201(18)
Index 219
Annabelle Mooney is Reader in Sociolinguistics at the University of Roehampton, UK.