The Consuming BodyIn a much-needed examination of the relationships among consumption, the idea of the body, and the formation of the self, The Consuming Body develops a profile of modern individuality--in both its bodily and mental aspects--and its relationship to consumption. Pasi Falk offers a major synthesis and critical assessment of the debates around the body, the self, and contemporary consumer culture. The author explores two fundamental issues for modern social theory--the delineation of modern consumption, and the body's historically changing position in various cultural orders. En route, he interrogates metaphors of consumption, examines anthropologies of taste and modern consumption, and investigates the issues of representation in advertising and pornography. Throughout the volume, the author is concerned with the contingent nature of definitions of the body as well as with the culturally and historically specific notions of the self and its boundaries; following this focus, he posits a new theory of the consuming body more relevant to our embodied human condition. |
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Page 108
The consumer society is constituted precisely on the consumption of the
exceeding part liberated from its original (?) curse (Bataille's la part maudite) and
prohibition (Forbidden Tree) and finally generalized to the whole world of goods.
The consumer society is constituted precisely on the consumption of the
exceeding part liberated from its original (?) curse (Bataille's la part maudite) and
prohibition (Forbidden Tree) and finally generalized to the whole world of goods.
Page 145
For Bataillc it is the 'cursed part' (la part maudite) which is destroyed in different
forms of transgressive practices (Bataille, 1975 [1949]). 4. The dual dynamics of
culture may be expressed in the binary relationships of profane vs. sacred - as ...
For Bataillc it is the 'cursed part' (la part maudite) which is destroyed in different
forms of transgressive practices (Bataille, 1975 [1949]). 4. The dual dynamics of
culture may be expressed in the binary relationships of profane vs. sacred - as ...
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Contents
Body Self and Culture | 10 |
Corporeality and History | 45 |
Towards an Historical Anthropology of Taste | 68 |
Copyright | |
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according actually advert aesthetic and/or Asta Nielsen basic Bataille bodily boundaries categorizations characterized conceived concept constitution consumer corporeality cultural defined Derrida diegesis diegetic dimension discourse distinction duality dynamics eating economic edible Elias erotic especially evidential experience expression film formulated Foucault frame story functions Georges Bataille Girard HADACOL hard core hedonist historical human body ideal identity images imaginary imitation implies inedible inside/outside interpretation introjection lack luxury manifested Marcel Mauss marginalist marketing mass meal means mimetic desire mode modern advertising modern consumption modern individual modern society moral mouth nature needs negative neophilia neophilic Norbert Elias object of desire oral patent medicines pleasure pornography positive primarily primitive productivist rational realization realm referring relation relationship representation represented ritual role scheme sense sensory sensual sexual social soul specific structured symbiosis symbolic taboo taste thematized theme transformed transgression use-value wage labourer words