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Somatic Desire: Recovering Corporeality in Contemporary Thought [Hardback]

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  • Format: Hardback, 234 pages, height x width x depth: 240x161x23 mm, weight: 494 g, 1 BW Photos
  • Pub. Date: 17-Jan-2019
  • Publisher: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1498581447
  • ISBN-13: 9781498581448
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  • Format: Hardback, 234 pages, height x width x depth: 240x161x23 mm, weight: 494 g, 1 BW Photos
  • Pub. Date: 17-Jan-2019
  • Publisher: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 1498581447
  • ISBN-13: 9781498581448
Other books in subject:
The essays in this volume all ask what it means for human beings to be embodied as desiring creaturesand perhaps still more piercingly, what it means for a philosopher to be embodied. In taking up this challenge via phenomenology, psychoanalysis, hermeneutics, and the philosophy of literature, the volume questions the orthodoxies not only of Western metaphysics but even of the phenomenological tradition itself. We miss much that has philosophical import when we exclude the somatic aspects of human life, and it is therefore the philosophers duty now to rediscover the meaning inherent in desire, emotion, and passionwithout letting the biases of any tradition determine in advance the meaning that reveals itself in embodied desire. Continental philosophers have already done much to challenge binary oppositions, and this volume sets out a new challenge: we must now also question the dichotomy between being at home and being alienated. Alterity is not simply something out there, separate from myself; rather, it penetrates me through and through, even in my corporeal experience. My body is both my own and other; I am other than myself and therefore other than my body. Additionally, this book is a conversation, not a presentation of a new orthodoxy. Thus, the hope is that these essays will open the way for further dialogue that will continue to radically rethink our understanding of embodied desire. Gathered together here are twelve essays that address these issues from deeply interrelated albeit unique perspectives from within the field.
Introduction vii
Sarah Horton
Stephen Mendelsohn
Christine Rojcewicz
Richard Kearney
Section I Somatic Desire
1(68)
1 Desire as the Individuation of Need: A Phenomenological Proposal in Dialogue with Barbaras and Husserl
3(22)
Andrea Staiti
2 Lateralization and Leaning: Somatic Desire as a Model for Supple Wisdom
25(16)
Brian Treanor
3 The Recovery of the Flesh in Ricœur and Merleau-Ponty
41(16)
Richard Kearney
4 Ricoeur on the Body: A Response to Richard Kearney
57(12)
Goncalo Marcelo
Section II The Body in Love and Sickness
69(70)
5 Embrace and Differentiation: A Phenomenology of Eros
71(20)
Emmanuel Falque
Richard Kearney
6 Toward an Ethics of the Spread Body
91(26)
Emmanuel Falque
7 Dying to Desire: Soma, Sema, Sarx, and Sex
117(22)
John Panteleimon Manoussakis
Section III The Inscribed Body
139(72)
8 Anxiety, Melancholy, Shrapnel: Contribution to a Phenomenology of Desire
143(20)
Richard Rojcewicz
9 The Poetics of Lack and the Problem of Ground in Knut Hamsun' s Hunger
163(20)
Christopher Yates
10 From the Writing of Desire to the Desire of Writing: Reflections on Proust
183(18)
Miguel de Beistegui
11 Miracle
201(10)
Alphonso Lingis
Conclusion 211(2)
Sarah Horton
Stephen Mendelsohn
Christine Rojcewicz
Richard Kearney
Index 213(6)
About the Authors/Editors 219
Sarah Horton is teaching fellow in philosophy at Boston College.

Stephen Mendelsohn is teaching fellow in philosophy at Boston College.

Christine Rojcewicz is teaching fellow in philosophy at Boston College.

Richard Kearney is Charles H. Seelig chair of philosophy at Boston College.