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  1. Bridging Psychiatric and Anthropological Approaches: The Case of “Nerves” in the United States.Britt Dahlberg, Frances K. Barg, Joseph J. Gallo & Marsha N. Wittink - 2009 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 37 (3):282-313.
  • Socio‐Economic Change and Emotional Illness among the Highland Maya of Chiapas Mexico.George A. Collier, Pablo J. Farias Campero, John E. Perez & Victor P. White - 2000 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 28 (1):20-53.
  • Malagasy and Western Conceptions of Memory: Implications for Postcolonial Politics and the Study of Memory.Jennifer Cole - 2006 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 34 (2):211-243.
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  • Cochlear Implants: Young Adults’ Embodied Experiences of Deafness and Hearing through Implanted Technology.Anna Chur-Hansen, Susan R. Hemer & Claire Elizabeth Harris - 2023 - Body and Society 29 (1):3-27.
    This article ethnographically considers the experiences of Australian young people who were born deaf and who hear and listen through cochlear implants to explore the intersection between the sensory body, lived experience and technology. The article draws on phenomenology to examine how experiences of deafness are productive in analysing articulations of embodiment and the meanings embedded in a body that is valued as both deaf and hearing. Leaving aside binary conceptions of deaf versus hearing, and understandings of the cochlear implant (...)
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  • Nursing as textually mediated reality.Julianne Cheek & Trudy Rudge - 1994 - Nursing Inquiry 1 (1):15-22.
    Nursing and nursing practice both construct and are in turn constructed by the context in which they operate. Texts play a central part in that construction. As such, nursing and nursing practice can be considered to represent a reality that is textually mediated. This paper explores the notion of nursing as a textually mediated reality and offers the reader the possibility of engaging in reflection on what implications this has for nursing and their own nursing practice. The analyses provided draw (...)
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  • Health, harm, and habitus: Techniques of the body in COVID-19.Sophie Chao - 2023 - Thesis Eleven 177 (1):103-116.
    This article revisits French sociologist Marcel Mauss’ notion of ‘techniques of the body’ to analyze the emergence of corporeal and behavioral norms instituted to prevent the spread of the coronavirus pandemic. Centering its analysis on the early stages of COVID’s global spread, the article examines a range of everyday, micro-practices that reveal how the pandemic changed our awareness, uses, and assessments of our own and others’ bodies. In a context where to not touch was to care, people often struggled to (...)
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  • Memory, Trauma, and Embodied Distress: The Management of Disruption in the Stories of Cambodians in Exile.Gay Becker, Yewoubdar Beyene & Pauline Ken - 2000 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 28 (3):320-345.
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  • Contextual Exceptionalism After Death: An Information Ethics Approach to Post-Mortem Privacy in Health Data Research.Marieke A. R. Bak & Dick L. Willems - 2022 - Science and Engineering Ethics 28 (4):1-20.
    In this article, we use the theory of Information Ethics to argue that deceased people have a prima facie moral right to privacy in the context of health data research, and that this should be reflected in regulation and guidelines. After death, people are no longer biological subjects but continue to exist as informational entities which can still be harmed/damaged. We find that while the instrumental value of recognising post-mortem privacy lies in the preservation of the social contract for health (...)
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  • Embodiment and Ontologies of Inequality in Medicine: Towards an Integrative Understanding of Disease and Health Disparities.M. Austin Argentieri - 2018 - Body and Society 24 (3):125-152.
    In this article, I draw on my fieldwork creating protein models of hepatitis B at a biotech laboratory to think through how to approach the body and disease from ontological and phenomenological perspectives. I subsequently draw on Mariella Pandolfi’s work on how bodies can be made to suffer history and Paul Farmer’s work on global tuberculosis disparities to explore ways of analysing embodied activity as a means of identifying and clinically addressing enactments of social inequality and disease. I also introduce (...)
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  • Beyond Public Health and Private Choice: Breastfeeding, Embodiment and Public Health Ethics.Supriya Subramani - 2023 - Asian Bioethics Review 16 (2):249-266.
    The key objective of this paper is to emphasize the importance of acknowledging breastfeeding as an embodied social practice within interventions related to breastfeeding and lactation and illustrate how this recognition holds implications for public health ethics debates. Recent scholarship has shown that breastfeeding and lactation support interventions undermine women’s autonomy. However, substantial discourse is required to determine how to align with public health goals while also recognizing the embodied experiences of breastfeeding and lactating individuals. Presently, interventions in this realm (...)
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  • Existential phenomenology and qualitative research.Anthony Vincent Fernandez - 2024 - In Kevin Aho, Megan Altman & Hans Pedersen (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Existentialism. Routledge.
    This chapter provides an overview of how existential phenomenology has influenced qualitative research methods across a range of disciplines across the social, health, educational, and psychological sciences. It focuses specifically on how the concepts of “existential structures,” or “existentials”—such as selfhood, temporality, spatiality, affectivity, and embodiment—have been used in qualitative research. After providing a brief introduction to what qualitative research is and why philosophers should be interested in it, the chapter provides clear, straightforward examples of how qualitative researchers have used (...)
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  • Taking phenomenology beyond the first-person perspective: conceptual grounding in the collection and analysis of observational evidence.Marianne Elisabeth Klinke & Anthony Vincent Fernandez - 2022 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 22 (1):171-191.
    Phenomenology has been adapted for use in qualitative health research, where it’s often used as a method for conducting interviews and analyzing interview data. But how can phenomenologists study subjects who cannot accurately reflect upon or report their own experiences, for instance, because of a psychiatric or neurological disorder? For conditions like these, qualitative researchers may gain more insight by conducting observational studies in lieu of, or in conjunction with, interviews. In this article, we introduce a phenomenological approach to conducting (...)
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  • Psychedelics, embodiment, and intersubjectivity.Kai River Blevins - 2023 - Journal of Psychedelic Studies 7 (S1):40-47.
    Background and aims Research into the social aspects of set and setting have demonstrated that race is a significant factor in psychedelic experiences for racially marginalized populations. Yet, many studies of psychedelic-induced experiences continue to proceed without collecting data on or considering the influence of race or other social categories. These approaches abstract subjectivity from its embodied and historical conditions, isolating consciousness in ways that do not accord with lived experience. -/- Methods This article draws on critical phenomenology, anthropology, and (...)
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  • Theatrical and Ritual Boundaries in South Asia: An Introductory Essay.Elisa Ganser - 2017 - In Elisa Ganser & Ewa Debicka-Borek (eds.), Theatrical and Ritual Boundaries in South Asia: Part I. Ksiegarnia Akademicka.
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  • Intersubjectivity, Empathy, Life‐World, and the Social Brain: The Relevance of Husserlian Neurophenomenology for the Anthropology of Consciousness.Charles D. Laughlin - 2023 - Anthropology of Consciousness 34 (1):229-260.
    Our species of hominin, Homo sapiens, is an extremely social animal. We are born with social brains. The phenomenology of Edmund Husserl is a methodological approach to social consciousness that offers significant advantages in terms of uncovering and describing the essential structures of our social perceptions and actions. This is especially true in this period of post-neuro-turn social science, because the structures described by Husserlian “pure” phenomenology with its emphasis upon “returning to the things,” performing reductions, and developing the skills (...)
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  • “My Lady Tells Me I'm Good Woman…”: a Bulgarian Female Migrant's Life-Story Between Assistance Relations and Care Practices.Eugenio Zito - 2017 - World Futures 73 (4-5):334-352.
    In this article, I report on a Bulgarian female migrant caregiver's “life-story,” especially focusing on her relationship with an old Italian woman, on the care practices performed in her favor in Italy, and on her daughter and parents still living in Bulgaria. I chose to do it by means of an anthropological approach based on experience as field of mediation between personal dimensions and historical and social processes and therefore centered on the body conceived as historical product, the influence of (...)
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  • Informal Surrogacy in China: Embodiment and Biopower.Jie Yang - 2015 - Body and Society 21 (1):90-117.
    Rather than being a form of explicitly commodified reproduction, informal surrogacy is practiced (and interpreted) in a working-class community in Beijing as part of local affective life, viewed in terms of gifting, favors, filial piety, and family concerns. Through this practice a particular form of biopower, articulated in affective terms, limits some women to serving as instruments of reproduction. Unlike the common western assumption of a physical body as separate from the experiencing subject, the Chinese body has a subjective, experiential (...)
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  • Have a heart: Xenotransplantation, nonhuman death and human distress.Tania Woods - 1998 - Society and Animals 6 (1):47-65.
    An increasing shortage of transplant donor organs currently results in an escalating number of preventable human deaths. Xenotransplantation. the use of animal organs for transplantation into humans, is now heralded as medicine's most viable answer to the urgent and insurmountable human organ scarcity. Although claimed to be a biomedical prerogative, xenotransplantation is a cultural phenomenon - a procedure engaging both the physical and symbolic manipulation of human and nonhuman bodies, thereby transforming corporeality, identity, and culture. Biomedical and scientific discourses about (...)
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  • Change and the Construction of Gendered Selfhood among Mexican Men Experiencing Erectile Difficulty.Emily Wentzell - 2013 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 41 (1):24-45.
  • Embodied Identity and Political Participation: Squatters' Engagement in the Participatory Budget in Brazil.Ana Paula Pimentel Walker - 2013 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 41 (2):199-222.
  • The Unarticulated Existential Body: Embracing Embodiment and Representation in the Ethnographic Model of Objectivity.Daniel Lema Vidal - forthcoming - Philosophy of the Social Sciences.
    This article further systematizes the existential body, contributing to the ethnographic model of embodied objectivity. It situates embodiment as the foundation of knowledge, demonstrating its underdevelopment in anthropological literature. The paper explores the philosophical relationship between being-in-the-world and Merleau-Ponty’s body-proper, emphasizing the central role of embodied pre-objective signification in representational ethnographic knowing. This aspect is often insufficiently addressed, particularly in light of certain ethnographic applications of the epoché. The paper concludes that, given the oscillatory apprehension of embodiment, the use of (...)
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  • On the problem of empathy: The case of Yap, Federated States of Micronesia.C. Jason Throop - 2008 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 36 (4):402-426.
  • Hypocognition, a “Sense of the Uncanny,” and the Anthropology of Ambiguity: Reflections on Robert I. Levy's Contribution to Theories of Experience in Anthropology.C. Jason Throop - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 33 (4):499-511.
  • Introduction: Toward an Anthropology of Affect and Evocative Ethnography.Ian Skoggard & Alisse Waterston - 2015 - Anthropology of Consciousness 26 (2):109-120.
    A growing interest in affect holds much promise for anthropology by providing a new frame to examine and articulate subjective and intersubjective states, which are key parts of human consciousness and behavior. Affect has its roots in the social, an observation that did not go unnoticed by Durkheim and since then has been kept in view by those social scientists interested in the emotions, feelings, and subjectivity. However, the challenge for ethnographers has always been to articulate in words and conceptualize (...)
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  • Signing in the Flesh: Notes on Pragmatist Hermeneutics.Dmitri N. Shalin - 2007 - Sociological Theory 25 (3):193 - 224.
    This article offers an alternative to classical hermeneutics, which focuses on discursive products and grasps meaning as the play of difference between linguistic signs. Pragmatist hermeneutics reconstructs meaning through an indefinite triangulation, which brings symbols, icons, and indices to bear on each other and considers a meaningful occasion as an embodied semiotic process. To illuminate the word-body-action nexus, the discussion identifies three basic types of signifying media: (1) the symbolic-discursive, (2) the somatic-affective, and (3) the behavioral-performative, each one marked by (...)
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  • The Unmaking and Making of Self: Embodied Suffering and Mind–Body Healing in Brazilian Candomblé.Rebecca Seligman - 2010 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 38 (3):297-320.
  • Embodied Critical Realism.Kevin Schilbrack - 2014 - Journal of Religious Ethics 42 (1):167-179.
    Christian Smith's What Is a Person? provides an account of the person from the perceptive of critical realism. As a fellow critical realist, I support that philosophical position and in this response I seek to support it by connecting it to the embodied realism developed by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson. In order to bring the two forms of realism together, I critique both the relativism of embodied realism and the idea, found in Smith, that the person's awareness of the (...)
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  • Anthropology, Polanyi, and afropentecostal ritual: A scientific and theological epistemology of participation.Craig Scandrett-Leatherman - 2008 - Zygon 43 (4):909-923.
    The 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis sponsored both an International Congress of Arts and Sciences aimed at unity of knowledge and an anthropology exhibit of diverse peoples. Jointly these represented a quest for unifying knowledge in a diverse world that was fractured by isolated specializations and segregated peoples. In historical perspective, the Congress's quest for knowledge is overshadowed by Ota Benga who was part of the anthropology exhibit. The 1904 World's Fair can be viewed as a Euro-American ritual, a (...)
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  • Chasing some bodies: Tracing the embodiment of female refugees in transnational settings and reading tales of their bodies.Younes Saramifar - 2018 - European Journal of Women's Studies 25 (2):183-197.
    The way individuals embody their homeland has been addressed by several scholars. However, this article questions how female refugees embody transnational settings while seeking a new home and homeland. The tales of bodies are traced through the writings of three Iranian female refugees living in Europe. The article analyses their autobiographies through a critical reading of Thomas Csordas’s phenomenology of body–world relations and then diverges from him to draw inspiration from Deleuzian becoming. The study attempts to offer an anthropology of (...)
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  • Encounters with the religious imagination and the emergence of creativity.Arthur Saniotis - 2009 - World Futures 65 (7):464 – 476.
    Ervin Laszlo's notion of the interrelationship between evolution and creativity as being intrinsic to universal life processes has been influential to the biological and social sciences. Central to Laszlo's thinking is the notion of convergence in biological and social systems that are posited on creative complexity. In this article, I employ Laszlo's concept of creativity in relation to the human religious imagination. Cross-cultural studies of the religious imagination examine the architecture of human consciousness and ways of knowing. These two areas (...)
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  • What does it feel like to be post-secular? Ritual expressions of religious affects in contemporary renewal movements.Naomi Irit Richman - 2018 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 79 (3):295-310.
    ABSTRACTThis paper seeks to problematise and complexify scholarly accounts of contemporary emotional repression in Western contexts by presenting counterevidence in the form of two examples of post-secular collective affectivity and their ritual expressions. It argues that both narratives of emotional repression and expression fail to capture the non-linear complexity of processes of cultural transformation, which have resulted in the simultaneous expression and repression of ritualistic affects that are products of our evolutionary embodied history. Drawing on insights from affect theory, this (...)
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  • Rethinking the Body and Its Boundaries.Leigh E. Rich, Michael A. Ashby & Pierre-Olivier Méthot - 2012 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 9 (1):1-6.
    Rethinking the Body and Its Boundaries Content Type Journal Article Category Editorial Pages 1-6 DOI 10.1007/s11673-011-9353-8 Authors Leigh E. Rich, Department of Health Sciences (Public Health), Armstrong Atlantic State University, 11935 Abercorn Street, Savannah, GA 31419, USA Michael A. Ashby, Palliative Care and Persistent Pain Services, Royal Hobart, Hospital, Southern Tasmania Area Health Service, and School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Tasmania, 1st Floor, Peacock Building, Repatriation Centre, 90 Davey Street, Hobart, TAS 7000 Australia Pierre-Olivier Méthot, ESRC (...)
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  • Culture, salience, and psychiatric diagnosis: exploring the concept of cultural congruence & its practical application.Mohammed Abouelleil Rashed - 2013 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 8:5.
    Cultural congruence is the idea that to the extent a belief or experience is culturally shared it is not to feature in a diagnostic judgement, irrespective of its resemblance to psychiatric pathology. This rests on the argument that since deviation from norms is central to diagnosis, and since what counts as deviation is relative to context, assessing the degree of fit between mental states and cultural norms is crucial. Various problems beset the cultural congruence construct including impoverished definitions of culture (...)
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  • „Atmosphäre“: Zum Potenzial eines Konzepts für die Religionswissenschaft: Ein Forschungsüberblick.Martin Radermacher - 2018 - Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft 26 (1):142-194.
    ZusammenfassungAusgehend von der Feststellung, dass „Atmosphären“ einerseits ein empirischer Sachverhalt im religionswissenschaftlichen Feld sind und andererseits in verschiedenen Disziplinen seit gut 40 Jahren auch als analytisches Konzept gehandelt werden, verfolgt dieser Literaturüberblick das Ziel, den Stand der Forschung zum Atmosphärenkonzept zusammenzufassen und das Potenzial des Konzepts für religionswissenschaftliche Forschung zu diskutieren. Der Beitrag stellt wesentliche Positionen zum Atmosphärenkonzept aus Philosophie, Phänomenologie, Psychologie, Ästhetik und Kunstwissenschaft sowie Architekturgeschichte, Städtebau, Soziologie, Humangeographie und Theologie vor und konstatiert ein religionswissenschaftliches Forschungsdesiderat. Auch die Religionsästhetik (...)
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  • Circling around the Really Real: Spirit possession ceremonies and the search for authenticity in Bahian Candomblé.Mattijs van de Port - 2005 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 33 (2):149-179.
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  • The Affective Scope: Entering China's Urban Moral and Economic World Through Its Emotional Disturbances.Jean-Baptiste Pettier - 2016 - Anthropology of Consciousness 27 (1):75-96.
    From an outsider's perspective, today's Popular China might appear as a self-confident and triumphant country. However, a large-scale examination of the country's recent moral controversies reveals a very different picture, one that has much to do with the widespread local public perception of an ongoing “moral crisis”, whose examination requires careful attention placed on the ethical and affective aspects of the everyday lives of today's Chinese people. In this article, I propose to examine the anguish that Chinese bachelor youths and (...)
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  • Anthropological Epochés: Phenomenology and the Ontological Turn.Morten Axel Pedersen - 2020 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 50 (6):610-646.
    This article has two objectives. In the first part, I present a critical overview of the extensive anthropological literature that may be deemed “phenomenological.” Following this critique, which is built up around a classification into four different varieties of phenomenological anthropology, I discuss the relationship between phenomenological anthropology and the ontological turn (OT). Contrary to received wisdom within the anthropological discipline, I suggest that OT has several things in common with the phenomenological project. For the same reason, I argue, it (...)
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  • Donations of Human Organs or Bodies After Death: A Cultural Phenomenology of "Flesh" in the Greek Context.Eleni Papagaroufali - 1999 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 27 (3):283-314.
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  • Embodiment and the Construction of Social Knowledge: Towards an Integration of Embodiment and Social Representations Theory.Cliodhna O'Connor - 2017 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 47 (1):2-24.
    Recent developments in the psychological and social sciences have seen a surge of attention to concepts of embodiment. The burgeoning field of embodied cognition, as well as the long-standing tradition of phenomenological philosophy, offer valuable insights for theorising how people come to understand the world around them. However, the implications of human embodiment have been largely neglected by one of the key frameworks for conceptualising the development of social knowledge: Social Representations Theory. This article seeks to spark a dialogue between (...)
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  • The Corporeal Body in Virtual Reality.Craig D. Murray & Judith Sixsmith - 1999 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 27 (3):315-343.
  • From epistemology to the method: phenomenology of the body, qì_ cultivation ( _qìgōng) and religious experiences in Chinese worlds.Evelyne Micollier - 2020 - Anthropology of Consciousness 31 (2):200-222.
    At the intersections of social anthropology, philosophy, and Asian studies, my paper explores the body ecologic through a phenomenological frame in the context of Chinese culture engaging both theory and method. How can qì cultivation experiences transporting bodies and persons in movement, within the world and their “life‐world,” be interpreted through a phenomenology of perception? Based on ethnographic study data collected mainly in South China (Guangzhou) and in Taiwan (1990s–2000s), this exploration is situated within qìgōng experiences (training, cultivating and mastering (...)
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  • The Body and the Senses: Visual Methods, Videography and the Submarine Sensorium.Stephanie Merchant - 2011 - Body and Society 17 (1):53-72.
    Drawing on methodological approaches used by visual anthropologists, film theorists and debates prevalent in the cultural studies literature, this paper is interdisciplinary in approach and attempts to tackle the challenge of collecting and analyzing embodied, sensuous and pre-reflective ‘data’ by advocating the value of integrating videography into research methodologies. The paper is illustrated with an examination of underwater videography footage, featuring scuba divers coming to terms with their surroundings. By considering the ways in which those featured in the film relate (...)
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  • Bruner's search for meaning: A conversation between psychology and anthropology.Cheryl Mattingly, Nancy C. Lutkehaus & C. Jason Throop - 2008 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 36 (1):1-28.
  • The Material Body, Social Processes and Emotion: `Techniques of the Body' Revisited.Margot L. Lyon - 1997 - Body and Society 3 (1):83-101.
  • Towards an anthropological theory of space and place.Setha M. Low - 2009 - Semiotica 2009 (175):21-37.
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  • Another Angle on Pollution Experience: Toward an Anthropology of the Emotional Ecology of Risk Mitigation.Peter C. Little - 2012 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 40 (4):431-452.
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  • Perceiving subjectivity in bodily movement: The case of dancers. [REVIEW]Dorothée Legrand & Susanne Ravn - 2009 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 8 (3):389-408.
    This paper is about one of the puzzles of bodily self-consciousness: can an experience be both and at the same time an experience of one′s physicality and of one′s subjectivity ? We will answer this question positively by determining a form of experience where the body′s physicality is experienced in a non-reifying manner. We will consider a form of experience of oneself as bodily which is different from both “prenoetic embodiment” and “pre-reflective bodily consciousness” and rather corresponds to a form (...)
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  • Dys‐appearing Tongues and Bodily Memories: The Aging of First‐Generation Resident Koreans in Japan.Sandra Soo-Jin Lee - 2000 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 28 (2):198-223.
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  • On Knowing and Not Knowing “Life” in Molecular Biology and Xhosa Healing: Ontologies in the Preclinical Trial of a South African Indigenous Medicine (Muthi).Julie Laplante - 2014 - Anthropology of Consciousness 25 (1):1-31.
    Seemingly distant practices of molecular biology and indigenous Xhosa healing have commonalities that I would like to bring into conversation in this article. The preclinical trial of an indigenous medicine brings them together in a research consortium. In this instance, both sets of experts are meant to collaborate in preparing a wild bush for it to pass the tests of the randomized clinical trial (RCT) and to potentially become a biopharmaceutical to counter the tuberculosis pandemic. I aim to tease out (...)
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  • Antropología fenomenológica y giro ontológico.Julián García Labrador - 2023 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 16 (1):95-113.
    Este artículo muestra los paralelismos y las divergencias del giro ontológico y de la antropología fenomenológica. Ambas corrientes, en fidelidad al dato etnográfico, comparten el rechazo al régimen de representación y ambas corrientes cuestionan los compromisos epistémicos del investigador. Sin embargo, el giro ontológico presenta una orientación conceptual, que deriva a menudo en tipología, mientras que la antropología fenomenológica atiende a las relaciones perceptivas del mundo de la vida desde una apertura hermenéutica.
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