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The Imagination of the Body and the History of Bodily Experience
The phrase "the imagination of the body" was intended to encompass both th eideas and theories by which the body has been interpreted, and the images by which it has been depicted. The broad aim of the symposium was yo explore, from a number of radically different perspectives, the relationship between these theories and images, which approach the body as an object, and the history of embodied experince.
Content :
1. Sakade Yoshinobu : Qi and the Resonating Body; in Japanese
2. James Elkins : What is the Difference between the Body's Inside and Its Outside?
3. Kuriyama Shigehisa : The Imagination of the Body and the History of Embodied Experience: The Case of Chinese Views of the Viscera
4. Shirasugi Etsuo : Envisioning the Inner Body in Edo Japan: The Inshoku yojo kagami (Rules of Dietary Life) and Boji yojo kagami (Rules of Sexual Life)
5. Li Jianmin : Great Display: A Note on Human Dissection and Spectacle in Han China
6. Paolo Santangelo : The Language of Body as Repulsive/Seductive Language: The Case of The Literati in Late Imperial China
7. Nakatani Hajime: Visual Presence and Embodiment in Seventeennth and Eighteenth Century Chinese Portraiture
8. Barbara Duden : Images and Ways of Knowing _ The History of Preganancy as an Example
9. Suzuki Akihito : Narcissistic Invalid or Heroic Genius?:Metaphors for Consumption in the 18th and 19th century England
10. Vassilis Paschalis : Sublime and Ridiculous Pain; Sacred and Profane Suffering: Some Iconographical Remarks on the Byzantine Concept of Pain
11. Feza Gunergun : Disease in Turkey: A Preliminary Study for the Second Half of the 19th Century
12. John Teramoto : Problems of Corporeality in Japanese Painting
13. Asano Shugo : The Imagination and Experince of the Body in Edo Erotic Prints
14. Inaga Shigemi : How to Do Things with a Parasite: Kiseiju by Iwaki Hitoshi(1990-Feb.1995), or A Vision of the Dividable Self in a Contemporary Japanese Comic-Book
15. Barbara Stafford : What's Magic Got to Do woth Ot? What the Computational "New Mind" Can Learn from the Combinatorial "Old Mind"
James Elkins : The Limits of Phenomenology: On the Inconceivable and the Unrepresentable in Skin and Membrane Metaphors
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