The Body: Social Process and Cultural TheoryMike Featherstone, Mike Hepworth, Bryan S Turner For centuries the human body has been a long-established issue in anthropology. However, human embodiment is increasingly becoming the primary focus in sociology and cultural studies as a means to understanding the complex interrelations between nature, culture, and society. At a theoretical level, this challenging volume explores the origins of a social theory of the body in sources ranging from the work of Nietzsche to contemporary feminist theory. Through specific case studies, the contributors demonstrate the importance of a theoretical understanding of the body to social and cultural analyses of contemporary societies. These range from the expression of emotions, romantic love, dietary practices, consumer behavior, physical fitness, beauty, and media images of women and sexuality. The Body will interest scholars and researchers, as well as students of social theory, sociology, anthropology, cultural studies, and philosophy. |
Contents
an Analytical Review 366 | 36 |
a Process | 103 |
On the Civilizing of Appetite | 126 |
The Discourse of Diet | 157 |
The Body in Consumer Culture | 170 |
Notes on | 197 |
Foucaults Account | 225 |
FoucaultDeleuze | 256 |
Other editions - View all
The Body: Social Process and Cultural Theory Mike Featherstone,Mike Hepworth,Bryan S Turner Limited preview - 1991 |
Common terms and phrases
aikido anthropology Anti-Oedipus appearance appetite artist baroque Baudrillard become behaviour biography biological Bizet bodily body maintenance body without organs body's budo capitalism Carmen century Cheyne concept consumer culture contemporary context Culture & Society Deleuze desire diet Discipline and Punish disciplined body discourse eating embodied emotions eroticism example experience expression Featherstone feeling feminist femme fatale Foucault Francis Bacon Freikorps function genealogy George and Lynne Habermas Hepworth human body hyperreality ideal images individual knowledge learning living London male Marilyn Marilyn Monroe Max Weber means Mérimée Michel Michel Foucault Mike Featherstone mirroring body modern Monroe moral nature Nietzsche Nietzsche's notion organic person political postmodern present problem production rationalization relation reproduce role sciences sense sexual social policy social theory sociology specific structure theme theoretical Theweleit tion tradition Turner University Press unlearned Weber welfare woman women York