The volume brings together for the first time foundational
twentieth-century texts on the concept of the body.
The concept of the body has emerged as one of the most important
areas of recent philosophical inquiry. Continental thinkers,
beginning with the phenomenologists, began to rethink this
important concept and to develop alternatives to traditional
analytic reductionist attempts to characterize the body in mere
physical or biological terms.
This volume begins with selections from phenomenological
writings of Edmund Husserl, Martin Hidegger, and Maurice
Merleau-Ponty. These selections are accompanied by essays from Donn
Welton, Elmar Holenstein, David Levin, Anthony J. Steinbock and
Drew Leder (Part I). The phenomenological accounts have been
supplemented, perhaps replaced, by the psychotropic and
genealogical analyses of Jacques Lacan and Michael Foucault (Part
II), and by the semiological analysis of the gendered body offered
by Julia Kristeva and Luce Irigaray (Part III). The theories of
these important yet difficult thinkers are
Discussed in seminal essay by Charles Bonner, alphonso Lingis,
Judith Butler, Kelly Oliver, and Tina Chanter.
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