Corine Pelluchon: Nourishment: a philosophy of the political body, trans. by Justin E. H. Smith: Bloomsbury, London and New York, 2019, 401 p

Continental Philosophy Review 53 (2):237-243 (2020)
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Abstract

“In the beginning there was hunger.” This opening quote from Levinas sets the stage for Pelluchon’s ethico-political project that revamps classical phenomenology’s intentionality of the ego by focusing on the sensing and enjoyment of the “gourmet cogito” who “lives from” and finds nourishment in a world that cannot be reduced to a noeme. She critiques Heidegger’s existential analytic and focuses on an ontology where our love of life precedes our being-towards-death, before boldly mapping out a new social pact, founded on the structures of existence that her phenomenology of nourishment reveals.

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Jill Drouillard
Mississippi University for Women

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