Embodiment: Clinical, Critical and Cultural Perspectives on Health and Illness

Portada
McGraw-Hill Education (UK), 2004 M09 16 - 224 páginas
This is the first book to explore the idea of embodiment across a wide range of clinical contexts. Adopting a critical and cultural perspective, the book stresses the importance of understanding people through their lived experiences and constructions of their own body.

The book:

  • Challenges both the mind-body dichotomy and the biopsychosocial model
  • Examines the clinical significance of people's experience of ‘being a body’ through a broad range of health and illness experiences, in particular when the body is distressed, diseased, disordered, disabled or dismembered
  • Provides insight into the physical and emotional experiences of individuals through its empathetic style

Drawing a parallel with innovative work on neural plasticity, the author illustrates how we are now in an age of body plasticity, where our body boundaries are becoming increasingly ambiguous, allowing more degrees of freedom and offering more opportunities than ever before to overcome physical limitations.

From anorexia to amputation, Botox to body dysmorphic disorder, phantom limbs to acute and chronic pain, the book considers a broad range of bodily experiences.

Drawing on research from diverse areas including health and clinical psychology, neuroscience, medicine, nursing, anthropology, philosophy and sociology, this book is essential reading for students across all these disciplines.
 

Contenido

Chapter 01 Body plasticity
1
Chapter 02 Sensing self
25
Chapter 03 Somatic complaints
48
Chapter 04 Body sculpturing
84
Chapter 05 Illusory body experiences
109
Chapter 06 Enabling technologies
138
Chapter 07 Forms of embodiment
170
References
182
Index
201
Back cover
208
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