Ebook: Moving Bodies: Kenneth Burke at the Edges of Language
Author: Debra Hawhee
- Year: 2009
- Publisher: The University of South Carolina Press
- Language: English
- pdf
Burke examined the human body as a participant in thought rather than as the mind�s binary Cartesian opposite, grappling with notions of physical form as a corporeal intellect, the mental and biological interwoven within one life. By exploring his extensive writings on the subject alongside revealing considerations of his life and his scholarship, Hawhee maps his recurring invocation of a variety of perspectives in order to theorize bodies and communication, including music, mysticism, endocrinology, evolution, speech-gesture theory, and speech-act theory, as well as his personal experiences with pain and illness. Hawhee shows that Burke�s goal was to advance understanding of the body�s relationship to identity, to the creation of meaning, and to the circulation of language.
Her study brings to the fore one of Burke�s most important and understudied contributions to language theory, and she establishes Burke as a pioneer in a field where investigations into affect, movement, and sense perception broaden understanding of physical ways of knowing.