Offers a compelling intercultural perspective on body, art, self, and society. Reconsidering the Life of Power examines Chinese perspectives on bodily self-cultivation and explores how these can be resources for working past the ritual scripts of everyday life. In recent decades, European and American thinkers like Michel Foucault and Judith Butler have called attention to the way that people live out ritual scripts in order to be recognized by other people such that they might survive. Philosophers in China, however, have a long history of considering ritual not just in terms of confining power structures but also in terms of empowering artistic self-cultivation. Out of this convergence, a response to Butler’s The Psychic Life of Power becomes possible, along with fascinating implications for improving real-world experience. James Garrison looks at art and aesthetics as a way of responding positively to the vicissitudes of everyday life. This means reframing ritual practice in domains like meditation, yoga, tai chi chuan, dance, calisthenics, fashion, and beyond as a kind of work that delves into and unearths society’s long-accruing unconscious habits in a way that makes conscious one’s everyday speech, comportment, countenance, and presence. The everyday body thus becomes an artwork, speaking in novel ways to the everyday self by revealing an alternative to the programmed ritual scripts through which most of us tend to survive. Reconsidering the Life of Power offers a compelling contemporary intercultural perspective on body, art, self, and society that bridges theory and practice by providing an actionable yet deeply philosophical approach to enhancing life. James Garrison is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Baldwin Wallace University.
76John J. Mearsheimer, Tragedy of the Great Powers (New York: W.W. Norton, 2001), p. 250. 77 Chomsky, American Power and the New Mandarins, p. 268,269. 78 Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas, The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They ...
Judith Butler's new book considers the way in which psychic life is generated by the social operation of power, and how that social operation of power is concealed and fortified by the psyche that it produces.
In Reconsidering Olmec Visual Culture, she identifies the presence of women, human embryos, and fetuses in monuments and portable objects dating from 1400 to 400 BC and originating throughout much of Mesoamerica.
Domestic politics--even world history--will never quite be the same after reading this incisive compilation of web-based analysis. "PERSECUTION, PRIVILEGE & POWER" is a fast read that also makes a provocative and memorable gift.
... cultural and political life suggest the power and the prominence of this idea, and the timeliness of this volume. The main purpose of this volume is to reconsider the meaning and the validity of the idea of “stagnation” and its ...
Reconsidering work-life balance debates: Challenging limited understandings of the 'life' component in the context of ethnic minority women's experiences. British Journal ofManagement, 19, 99–109. Kay, F. and Hagan, J. 1998.
This important work should be read by anyone interested in a critical analysis of international climate law and policy that offers insights into questions of political economy, power, and unequal authority.
Jenson, Robert W. “The Hauerwas Project.” Modern Theology 8, no. 3 (July 1, 1992): 285–95. ... In Dictionary of New Testament Background, edited by Craig A. Evans and Stanley E. Porter. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000. ———.
Featuring a unique and dynamic 4-part process, Roar will show you how to: - Reimagine yourself - Own who you are - Act on what’s next - Reassess your relationships Transformative and invigorating, this is the ultimate roadmap to the ...
Yet in the realm of private matters, critical scrutiny seems to dissipate: power relations frequently remain ... theorists to reconsider their allegiance to a distinction between public and private life that blunts examination of ...