Culture and the senses: bodily ways of knowing in an African community – By Kathryn Linn Geurts

2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 432-433
Author(s):  
John M. Chernoff
Author(s):  
Kathryn Linn Geurts

For centuries, European and Global North observers of non-Western societies have been fascinated by African bodily expressivity and power. Artistic and ritual displays of bodily ways of knowing have captivated explorers, traders, missionaries, anthropologists, historians, and tourists, and this engagement has spawned a robust industry of representational accounts of African affect and sensibilities. Both European colonialism and American imperialism created and produced voluminous documentation of “the black body” through study of folklore, proverbs, myth, sculpture, masks, adornment objects such as beads, tunics, hair combs, and so forth. In addition, film and still photography have been used to capture vivid portrayals of bodily powers revealed in dance and possession trance. A history of such documentation and collection reveals shifts over more than a century in the way body, affect, and sensing have been understood and studied. Anthropology and psychology took the lead in attending to affect and the senses, but by the late 20th century additional fields such as music, art history, archaeology, and history joined in the sensory turn.


Author(s):  
Noel Jackson

British Romantic writers were preoccupied with the senses and sensation to an unusually high degree. This chapter reconstructs some of the sources and consequences of this preoccupation. The notion that imagination depends on the senses derived both from a long-standing tradition of empiricist philosophy and from the contemporary physiology of the nerves. These intellectual contexts gave scientific validity and new impetus to conceptions of imaginative literature as, in William Wordsworth’s phrase, a ‘science of feelings’. Romantic writers routinely emphasize sensate as opposed to purely cogitative ways of knowing, and develop innovative accounts of embodied aesthetic response. Transmitting sensation from one person to another, the literature of sensation could facilitate more widespread social or political transformations. Less dramatically but no less significantly, the Romantics also pioneered some new and still relevant ways of understanding the most common, ordinary acts of sensation and perception.


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 27-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Mudry ◽  
Jessica Hayes-Conroy ◽  
Nancy Chen ◽  
Aya H. Kimura

This conversation is part of a special issue on “Critical Nutrition” in which multiple authors weigh in on various themes related to the origins, character, and consequences of contemporary American nutrition discourses and practices, as well as how nutrition might be known and done differently. In this section authors discuss the impoverishment of nutritionism as a way of knowing and engaging with food, highlighting how nourishment is not amenable to either simplification or standardization. Some call for alternate ways of knowing food, through revitalizing tradition and culture, for example, and some emphasize engaging food through the senses. One author is skeptical that these other ways of knowing food can address real nutritional deficiencies.


Author(s):  
Michelle Voss Roberts

Michelle Voss Roberts takes to heart the simple insight that theologians are in fact always drawing on various ways of knowing; comparative theology is no exception, and its multifaceted epistemology expects corresponding complexities in theological anthropology. Accordingly, she devotes the core of her essay to the constructive development of such an anthropology with respect to the human faculties by Thomas Aquinas and the Kashmir Saiva theologian Abhinavagupta. His system resonates with Aquinas’s anthropology, generating resonances that are enhanced by their epistemologies’ nuanced and flexible epistemological contribution to theologies of the body, the senses, and other faculties. In this light, constructive comparative theology can be seen as a practice of thinking-feeling with the categories and questions of another tradition. At the conclusion of her essay, Voss Roberts highlights the value of attending to various embodied faculties, including reason itself, awareness of the elements, the physical senses, the emotions, and even limit cases such as apophatic unknowing.


2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (10) ◽  
pp. 1430-1443
Author(s):  
Kelvin E.Y. Low ◽  
Noorman Abdullah

The senses and their concomitant practices have historically and contemporaneously traversed borders and boundaries and in effect, acquire different meanings. Sensory modalities and ways of knowing become reconfigured as a result of cross-cultural sensory encounters in everyday life. Drawing from colonial and contemporary ethnographic encounters in Singapore, we make a case to extend sociocultural analyses of the character of the sensory—in particular, sound and smell—to consider its agentic potential to permeate and traverse boundaries. We employ the sensory as a lens to capture intimations of connectedness and disconnectedness; and to more broadly unravel alternative and comparative understandings of mobility and movement through time and space.


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