How to land : finding ground in an unstable world / Ann Cooper Albright.
Publisher: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2019]Description: xi, 224 pages ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780190873677
- 0190873671
- 9780190873684
- 019087368X
- BF698.35.R47 A53 2019
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | BF698.35 .R47 A53 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001483139 |
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BF698.35 .I59 C35 2012 Quiet : the power of introverts in a world that can't stop talking / | BF698.35 .I59 D457 2015 Introverts in love : the quiet way to happily ever after / | BF698.35 .O57 F69 2012 Rainy brain, sunny brain : how to retrain your brain to overcome pessimism and achieve a more positive outlook / | BF698.35 .R47 A53 2019 How to land : finding ground in an unstable world / | BF698.35 .R47 G66 2012 Surviving survival : the art and science of resilience / | BF698.35.R47 R462 2017 Resilience. | BF698.35 .V85 M39 2017 A fragile life : accepting our vulnerability / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Falling -- Disorientation -- Suspension -- Gravity -- Resilience -- Connection.
"How to Land: Finding Ground in an Unstable World foregrounds the importance of embodiment as a means of surviving the disorientation of our twenty-first century world. Linking somatics and politics, author Ann Cooper Albright argues that a renewed attention to gravity as both a metaphoric sensibility and a physical experience can help transform moments of personal disorientation into an opportunity to reflect on the important relationship between individual resiliency and communal responsibility. Long one of the nation's preeminent thinkers in dance studies, Albright asks how contemporary bodies are affected by repeated images of falling bodies, bombed-out buildings, and displaced peoples, as well as recurring evocations of global economies and governments in discursive free fall or dissolution. What kind of fear gets lodged in connective tissue when there is an underlying anxiety that certain aspects of our world are in danger of falling apart? To answer this question, she draws on analyses of perception from cognitive studies, tracing the discussions of meaning, body and language through the work of Sara Ahmed, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Shaun Gallagher, among others. In addition, she follows the past decade of debate in contemporary media concerning the implications of the weightless and two-dimensional social media exchanges on structures of attention and learning, as well as their effect on the personal growth and socialization of a generation of young adults. Each chapter interweaves discussions of movement actions with their cultural implications, documenting specific bodily experiences and then tracing their ideological ripples out through the world."--Publisher's description.
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