Description
The ever increasing ability of medical technology to reshape the human body in fundamental ways - from organ and tissue transplants to reconstructive surgery and prosthetics - is something now largely taken for granted. But for a philosopher, such interventions raise fundamental and fascinating questions about our sense of individual identity and its relationship to the physical body.
Drawing on and engaging with philosophers from across the centuries, Jenny Slatman here develops a novel argument: that our own body always entails a strange dimension, a strangeness that enables us to incorporate radical physical changes.
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Rights Information
World rights available excluding the Netherlands.
Endorsements
"By developing a phenomenology of the body informed by recent philosophical contributions to the area, but also taking into account the transformations of body and self enacted by way of medical technologies and the images of body and self found in popular culture, Slatman offers an exciting view on the embodied self. Her book is a real treat to read." - Frederik Svenaeus, Södertörn University, for Journal of Phenomenological Psychology
"Jenny Slatman's Our Strange Body brings the Cartesian body into the 21st century, transforming our notions of self and other, inside and outside, mind and body, intimacy and strangeness, in the process. Slatman weaves together original readings of diverse figures across the history of philosophy, including Plato, Augustine, Descartes, De Lamettrie, Locke, Husserl, Austin, Ryle, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Dennett, and Nancy, with groundbreaking medical case studies of face, hand, and body organ transplants as well as creative insights gleaned from the work of contemporary performance and visual artists, to illustrate how what is most our own, namely, our own body, is also, at the same time, what is most strange to us. The animating insight of this innovative and fascinating investigation of personal identity is that the intimate self of oneself as a unique "I," is actually grounded upon that which constitutes us as a thing among other things, namely our physical body." - Gail Weiss, Professor of Philosophy and Human Sciences at the George Washington University, Washington DC
Author Biography
Jenny Slatman is associate professor philosophy in the department of Health, Ethics and Society at Maastricht University. She has published widely on the issue of embodiment in relation to both modern culture and medicine, including L'expression au-delà de la représentation (2003)
Bibliographic Information
- Publisher Amsterdam University Press
- Publication Date August 2014
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9789089646477
- Publication Country or regionNetherlands
- FormatPaperback
- Primary Price 19.95 EUR
- Pages180
- ReadershipGeneral
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234x156 mm
- Illustration0
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