Agency and Embodiment
About This Book
In Agency and Embodiment, Carrie Noland examines the ways in which culture is both embodied and challenged through the corporeal performance of gestures. Arguing against the constructivist metaphor of bodily inscription dominant since Foucault, Noland maintains that kinesthetic experience, produced by acts of embodied gesturing, places pressure on the conditioning a body receives, encouraging variations in cultural practice that cannot otherwise be explained.Drawing on work in disciplines as diverse as dance and movement theory, phenomenology, cognitive science, and literary criticism, Noland argues that kinesthesiaâfeeling the body moveâencourages experiment, modification, and, at times, rejection of the routine. Noland privileges corporeal performance and the sensory experience it affords in order to find a way beyond constructivist theory's inability to produce a convincing account of agency. She observes that despite the impact of social conditioning, human beings continue to invent surprising new ways of altering the inscribed behaviors they are called on to perform. Through lucid close readings of Marcel Mauss, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Bill Viola, AndrĂ© Leroi-Gourhan, Henri Michaux, Judith Butler, Frantz Fanon, Jacques Derrida, and contemporary digital artist Camille Utterback, Noland illustrates her provocative thesis, addressing issues of concern to scholars in critical theory, performance studies, anthropology, and visual studies.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The âStructuringâ Body: Marcel Mauss and Bodily Techniques
- 2. Gestural Meaning: Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Bill Viola, and the Primacy of Movement
- 3. Inscription and Embodiment: André Leroi-Gourhan and the Body as Tool
- 4. Inscription as Performance: Henri Michaux and the Writing Body
- 5. The Gestural Performative: Locating Agency in the Work of Judith Butler and Frantz Fanon
- Conclusion: Illegible Graffiti
- Notes
- Acknowledgments
- Index