Five Bodies: The Human Shape of Modern SocietyRenowned social critic John O'Neill takes the human body as the focal point of his inquiry into the complex relation of individuals, nature and social institutions. The body once served as the foundation for thinking about politics, society, and the world, O'Neill asserts, but this human proportion has been lost in the modern world. Carefully delineating the course and the consequences of this loss in many realms of modern life, O'Neill demonstrates that we are dominated by concepts of life, family, thought, health and sanity that barely allow us to maintain a sense of our individuality and humanity. O'Neill proposes a renewed and radical anthropomorphism, one that will restore the overwhelming modern world to comprehensible dimensions. ISBN 0-8014-1727-9: $17.50. |
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Page 46
... knowledge . The com- plicity between the embodied knower and the objects of scientific knowledge requires that anthropomorphism be regarded as a constitutive feature of modern knowledge rather than as an idol of human ignorance . Among ...
... knowledge . The com- plicity between the embodied knower and the objects of scientific knowledge requires that anthropomorphism be regarded as a constitutive feature of modern knowledge rather than as an idol of human ignorance . Among ...
Page 82
... knowledge . But even now we can envisage an extension of Habermas's program for the rational justifica- tion of an ideal speech community in terms of the specific dis- cursive pragmatics of the tri - level body politic . For such an ex ...
... knowledge . But even now we can envisage an extension of Habermas's program for the rational justifica- tion of an ideal speech community in terms of the specific dis- cursive pragmatics of the tri - level body politic . For such an ex ...
Page 133
... knowledge is concerned - one abandons the oppo- sition between what is ' interested ' and what is ' disinterested ' , the model of knowledge and the primacy of the subject . Borrowing a word from Petty and his contemporaries , but ...
... knowledge is concerned - one abandons the oppo- sition between what is ' interested ' and what is ' disinterested ' , the model of knowledge and the primacy of the subject . Borrowing a word from Petty and his contemporaries , but ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
INTRODUCTION Our Two Bodies | 15 |
CHAPTER THREE The Body Politic | 67 |
Copyright | |
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abomination administrative American animals anthropomorphism argued behavior biological biomedical blood bodily body politic bourgeois Cannibals and Kings chapters Claude Lévi-Strauss communicative body conception consumer consumerism consumption corporate culture death defamilized discourse Dogon earth economy Edmund Leach embodied exchange feminism Foucault functions Galbraith gendered genetic granary holy human body human shape ical ideology imagery individual industrial institutions Ivan Illich Juliet Mitchell labor late capitalism Lévi-Strauss libidinal body living logic London look Marshall Sahlins Marvin Harris Mary Douglas meat medicine metaphor mind moral myth natural nomic organs ourselves persons physical practice productive body prosthetic protein rational rethink Routledge & Kegan rule sense sexual shape of human shift social sciences Sociology strategies structure sumer symbolic therapeutic things tion Titmuss unclean animals University Press Vico welfare women words world's body