CFA: Eros and Thanatos: Bodies in Dance
If Eros represents those tendencies within us that aim to preserve life, and Thanatos represents the impulse toward death, how can these forces in our existence be approached from a somaesthetic point of view? The word flesh invites us to consider the eternal dance of Eros and Thanatos as existing between the potency of sexual desire and the bitterness of decline and finitude, with one always somehow the limit of the other. Contrarily, the word body elicits none of this, since the body is merely the observable, dissectible structure of a living being - the object of science. Yet somaesthetics, by its very name, appeals not to the body, nor to the flesh, but to the ‘soma’. Indeed, Shusterman (2014) explains that he chooses ‘soma’ “…to avoid problematic associations of body (which can be a lifeless, mindless thing) and flesh (which designates only the fleshly parts of the body and is strongly associated with Christian notions of sin)” and to emphasize that the somaesthetic project “concerns the lived, sentient, purposive body rather than merely a physical body.” In this context, the upcoming special issue will engage in a dissection of the themes of Eros and/or Thanatos in this context, with a special focus on the dancing body.
Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:
The Journal of Somaesthetics is a peer-reviewed, online, academic journal devoted to research that advances the interdisciplinary field of somaesthetics, understood as the critical study and meliorative cultivation of the experience and performance of the living body (or soma) as a site of sensory appreciation (aesthesis), practice, and realization. The term somaesthetics designates an interdisciplinary framework rather than a philosophical position. It deals, on the one hand, with the aesthetic experience of the body as a practice proper and, on the other hand, with the academic conceptualization of the experiencing body and the body experienced; it approaches the body as the mediating center between sensory experiences and cognitive realization. Somaesthetics describes an integrative field of research where aesthetic experiences meet theories about the body and its biological structures and functions, its phenomenological and epistemological functions, and its position and significances in culture and societies. The Journal of Somaesthetics invites proposals of academic papers, essays, and video articles from different fields of somatic practices, empirical research, art, and philosophy.
For more information about the journal, see http://journals.aau.dk/index.php/JOS
Schedule
Guidelines
Abstracts should be between 250 and 500 words.
Papers should be between 5,000 and 8,000 words and prepared for blind review, according to the Journal’s style guidelines as indicated on the Journal’s website:
https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/JOS/about/submissions
Complete articles should be submitted through the link above. Authors should submit a separate cover page indicating the author’s name, institutional affiliation, paper title and abstract, word count, keywords, and contact information.
Contact
Catherine Botha cbo...@uj.ac.za
Prof Catherine F. Botha |
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Professor of Philosophy |
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Philosophy |
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PhD: Philosophy, Radboud University Nijmegen |
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011 559 3997 |
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E-mail: |
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B Ring 708 |
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My UJ webpage: https://www.uj.ac.za/contact/Pages/Dr-Catherine-Botha.aspx |
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