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Selfhood and Recognition

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The disciplines of philosophy and cultural anthropology have one thing in common: human behavior. Yet surprisingly, dialogue between the two fields has remained largely silent until now. Selfhood...
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  • 01 November 2017
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The disciplines of philosophy and cultural anthropology have one thing in common: human behavior. Yet surprisingly, dialogue between the two fields has remained largely silent until now. Selfhood and Recognition combines philosophical and cultural anthropological accounts of the perception of individual action, exploring the processes through which a person recognizes the self and the other. Touching on humanity as porous, fractal, dividual, and relational, the author sheds new light on the nature of selfhood, recognition, relationality, and human life.

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Price: £104.00
Pages: 198
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Imprint: Berghahn Books
Series: Person, Space and Memory in the Contemporary Pacific
Publication Date: 01 November 2017
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781785336492
Format: Hardcover
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“The book offers a very differentiated examination of authoritative socio-philosophical literature, which can be helpful for anthropologists and sociologists, certainly also for psychologists, to reflect on our being in the world and to make it describable.” • Paideuma

“This is a highly original and ambitious book. [The author’s] discussion as a whole is enormously stimulating, and it represents perhaps the most sustained attempt to develop philosophical positions in dialogue with ethnographic data since the 1960s and 1970s.” · Joel Robbins, Trinity College, Cambridge

Figures
Acknowledgements

Introduction

PART I: PRELIMINARY REMARKS ON PERSON, THE SELF, AND MUTUAL RECOGNITION

Chapter 1. Introductory Reflections on Mutual Recognition
Chapter 2. Approaching Personhood from Relationality
Chapter 3. Aspects and Problems of Empathy

PART II: DEVELOPONG RELATIONAL SELFHOOD

Chapter 4. About Being Oneself as Another
Chapter 5. The Self as Person
Chapter 6. Empathic Understanding and Agency as Mutual Recognition
Chapter 7. An Outlook to Social Appreciation

Epilogue

References
Index