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E-raamat: Moving Imagination: Explorations of gesture and inner movement

Edited by (University College Ghent and Ghent University)
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This volume brings together contributions by philosophers, art historians and artists who discuss, interpret and analyse the moving and gesturing body in the arts. Broadly inspired by phenomenology, and taking into account insights from cognitive science, the contribution of the motor body in watching a film, attending a dance or theatre performance, looking at paintings or drawings, and listening to music is explored from a diversity of perspectives. This volume is intended for both the specialist and non-specialist in the fields of art, philosophy and cognitive science, and testifies to the burgeoning interest for the moving and gesturing body, not only in the creation but also in the perception of works of art. Imagination is tied to our capacity to silently resonate with the way a work of art has been or is created.
Moving imagination: Headlines and themes
1(18)
Helena De Preester
Bodily resonance
19(18)
Maxine Sheets-Johnstone
The moving body: Gestural recreation of the world in drama
37(14)
Xavier Escribano
Movement, gesture, and meaning: A sensorimotor model for audience engagement with dance
51(18)
William P. Seeley
Achieved spontaneity and spectator's performative experience - The motor dimension of the actor-spectator relationship
69(18)
Gabriele Sofia
The digital body in contemporary American cinema
87(14)
Marco Luceri
Embodiment: Technologies and musics
101(12)
Don Ihde
Is gesture knowledge? A philosophical approach to the epistemology of musical gestures
113(20)
Michael Funk
Mark Coeckelbergh
Sound in film as an inner movement: Towards embodied listening strategies
133(16)
Martine Huvenne
Body English: Kinaesthetic empathy, dance and the art of Len Lye
149(18)
Michael Parmenter
The somatic in kinetic sculpture: From Len Lye to an introverted kinetic sculpture (via Donna Haraway's cyborg)
167(18)
Laura Woodward
Edgar Degas: Modelling movement. Being in the body
185(20)
Boris Wiseman
Jonathan Cole
Time lines: The temporal dimension of marking
205(16)
David Rosand
Styles of observation and embodiment: Using drawing to understand Robert Morris' Untitled 3 L-Beams (1965)
221(14)
Francis Halsall
Cy Twombly: Gesture, space, and writing
235(12)
Rajiv Kaushik
Pre-motor and motor activities in early medieval handwriting
247(16)
Jan W. M. van Zwieten
Koos Jaap van Zwieten
The neurophenomenology of gesture in the art of Henri Michaux
263(18)
Jay Hetrick
Moving without moving: A first-person experiential phenomenological approach
281(14)
Natalie Depraz
The "I cannot, but it can" of aesthetic perception
295(16)
Erica Harris
Name index 311(2)
Subject index 313