The Senses Still
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Author | : C. Nadia Seremetakis |
Publisher | : University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | : 164 |
Release | : 1996-06-15 |
Genre | : Medical |
ISBN | : 9780226748771 |
What has happened to regional experiences that identify and shape culture? Regional foods are disappearing, cultures are dissolving, and homogeneity is spreading. Anthropologist and award-winning author of The Last Word: Women, Death, and Divination in Inner Mani, C. Nadia Seremetakis brings together essays by five scholars concerned with the senses and the anthropology of everyday life. Covering a wide range of topics—from film to food, from nationalism to the evening news—the authors describe ways in which sensory memories have preserved cultures otherwise threatened by urbanism and modernity. The contributors are Susan Buck-Morss, Allen Feldman, Jonas Frykman, C. Nadia Seremetakis, and Paul Stoller. C. Nadia Seremetakis is Advisor to the Minister of Public Health in Greece and visiting professor at the National School of Public Heath in Athens. She is the author of The Last Word: Women, Death, and Divination in Inner Mani, available from the University of Chicago Press.
Author | : C. Nadia Seremetakis |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 210 |
Release | : 2019-07-09 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 1000305430 |
How can culture and experience be conceptualized when theorists drag social meaning back and forth between institutions, objects, or acts, as if the dense communication between persons and things were only a quick exchange between surfaces? This volume challenges mentalist approaches to material culture through the historical and ethnographic analyses of sensory memory. The sensory landscape and its meaning-endowed objects bear within them emotional and historical sedimentation that pose crucial questions: What cultural practices enable the sensory-affective experience of history? How does the history of perception speak to the perception of history? The editor, in her four essays, discusses sensory memory as a cultural form not limited to the psychic apparatus of a monadic, pre-cultural, and ahistorical subject but embedded and embodied in a dispersed surround of created things, surfaces, depths, and densities that are stratigraphic sites of sensory biography and history. The volume demonstrates that any ethnographic discussion of the senses involves a priori claims about modernity. Thus the senses are explored in contemporary political and racial violence, exchange practices, the emotions, national identity, food-ways, spatial organization, leisure activity, and the electronic media. Well-known authors examine personal and social investments in objects and substances as the tip of a submerged collective language of materiality that firmly grasps the mutable structure of contemporary experience. Social memory is treated as a meta-sensory organ and shown to be a culturally mediated performance that is activated by material acts and emotionally tangible artifacts.
Author | : C Nadia Seremetakis |
Publisher | : Routledge |
Total Pages | : 149 |
Release | : 2021-06-02 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9780367311216 |
How can culture and experience be conceptualized when theorists drag social meaning back and forth between institutions, objects, or acts, as if the dense communication between persons and things were only a quick exchange between surfaces? This volume challenges mentalist approaches to material culture through the historical and ethnographic analyses of sensory memory. The sensory landscape and its meaning-endowed objects bear within them emotional and historical sedimentation that pose crucial questions: What cultural practices enable the sensory-affective experience of history? How does the history of perception speak to the perception of history? The editor, in her four essays, discusses sensory memory as a cultural form not limited to the psychic apparatus of a monadic, pre-cultural, and ahistorical subject but embedded and embodied in a dispersed surround of created things, surfaces, depths, and densities that are stratigraphic sites of sensory biography and history. The volume demonstrates that any ethnographic discussion of the senses involves a priori claims about modernity. Thus the senses are explored in contemporary political and racial violence, exchange practices, the emotions, national identity, food-ways, spatial organization, leisure activity, and the electronic media. Well-known authors examine personal and social investments in objects and substances as the tip of a submerged collective language of materiality that firmly grasps the mutable structure of contemporary experience. Social memory is treated as a meta-sensory organ and shown to be a culturally mediated performance that is activated by material acts and emotionally tangible artifacts.
Author | : Diane Ackerman |
Publisher | : Vintage |
Total Pages | : 354 |
Release | : 2011-12-07 |
Genre | : Science |
ISBN | : 0307763315 |
Diane Ackerman's lusciously written grand tour of the realm of the senses includes conversations with an iceberg in Antarctica and a professional nose in New York, along with dissertations on kisses and tattoos, sadistic cuisine and the music played by the planet Earth. “Delightful . . . gives the reader the richest possible feeling of the worlds the senses take in.” —The New York Times
Author | : C. Nadia Seremetakis |
Publisher | : University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | : 326 |
Release | : 1991-10-08 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 0226748766 |
Based on years of fieldwork in both rural and urban Greece, The Last Word explores women's cultural resistance as they weave together diverse social practices: improvised antiphonic laments, divinatory dreaming, the care and tending of olive trees and the dead, and the inscription of emotions and the senses on a landscape of persons, things, and places. These practices compose the empowering poetics of the cultural periphery. C. Nadia Seremetakis liberates the analysis of gender from reductive binary models and pioneers the alternative perspective of self-reflexive "native anthropology" in European ethnography.
Author | : Constance Classen |
Publisher | : Taylor & Francis |
Total Pages | : 166 |
Release | : 2023-02-28 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 1000884392 |
First published in 1993, Worlds of Sense is an exploration of the historical and cultural formation of the senses. As the author demonstrates, different cultures have strikingly different ways of ‘making sense’ of the world. In the modern urban West, we are accustomed to thinking in terms of visual models such as ‘world view,’ whereas the Ongee of the Andaman Islands, for example, live in a world ordered by smell and the Tzotzil of Mexico hold that temperature is the basic force of the cosmos. In a fascinating examination of the role of the senses in diverse societies and eras, Constance Classen shows the extent to which perception is shaped by and expressive of cultural values. This book will be of interest to students of cultural studies, sociology, anthropology, and philosophy.
Author | : Daniel Chamovitz |
Publisher | : Macmillan |
Total Pages | : 192 |
Release | : 2012-05-22 |
Genre | : Gardening |
ISBN | : 0374288739 |
Explores the secret lives of various plants, from the colors they see to whether or not they really like classical music to their ability to sense nearby danger.
Author | : Constantina Nadia Seremetakis |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 146 |
Release | : 1996 |
Genre | : Ethnopsychology |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Nalini Singh |
Publisher | : Harlequin |
Total Pages | : 141 |
Release | : 2015-09-14 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1460393546 |
Deception never felt this good. A reader favorite story from the New York Times–bestselling author of the Psy-Changeling Trinity series. Charlotte Ashton has always been on the outside looking in—until she meets worldly Alexandre Dupree. Consulting at her family’s Napa Valley vineyard, the winemaker soon has shy, innocent Charlotte completely under his spell. It’s as though he knows all her secret desires, all her dreams—just what it takes to seduce her. That’s because he’s read her secret journal. He’s discovered the real Charlotte—the sensual, generous woman she longs to be—and has acted accordingly. Is his crime so unforgivable when all he wants is to awaken her passion? Yet, to maintain her trust, he must to continue to lie . . .
Author | : Anita Chari |
Publisher | : Columbia University Press |
Total Pages | : 372 |
Release | : 2015-10-13 |
Genre | : Philosophy |
ISBN | : 0231540388 |
Anita Chari revives the concept of reification from Marx and the Frankfurt School to spotlight the resistance to neoliberal capitalism now forming at the level of political economy and at the more sensate, experiential level of subjective transformation. Reading art by Oliver Ressler, Zanny Begg, Claire Fontaine, Jason Lazarus, and Mika Rottenberg, as well as the politics of Occupy Wall Street, Chari identifies practices through which artists and activists have challenged neoliberalism's social and political logics, exposing its inherent tensions and contradictions.