This edited collection provides an in-depth and wide-ranging exploration of pragmatist philosopher Richard Shusterman’s distinctive project of “somaesthetics,” devoted not only to better understanding bodily experience but also to greater mastery of somatic perception, performance, and presentation. Against contemporary trends that focus narrowly on conceptual and computational thinking, Shusterman returns philosophy to what is most fundamental—the sentient, expressive, human body with its creations of living beauty. Twelve scholars here provide penetrating critical analyses of Shusterman on ontology, perception, language, literature, culture, politics, aesthetics, cuisine, music, and the visual arts, including films of his work in performance art.
Jerold J. Abrams is Professor of Philosophy at Creighton University and editor of
The Philosophy of Stanley Kubrick. His essays have appeared in
The Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society,
Practicing Pragmatist Aesthetics,
Shusterman’s Pragmatism, and many other volumes.
"This book accurately reflects the diversity that can be seen in the research of philosophers inspired by Shusterman […] Part of the book’s strength is that the authors of the studies have known Shusterman personally for many years, they can see his entire oeuvre and, accordingly, are able to interpret certain details in depth [...] Abrams’s edited collection on Shusterman’s somaesthetics is like a journey in which rational planning progresses while evoking emotional memories. It brings the reader much closer to somaesthetics and its multiple possibilities of interpretation and application. The entire book, not least through the golden image of the philosopher without words, demonstrates that soundless screams cannot go unnoticed and the clamorous silence of the body can be a reality." - Nóra Horváth, in:
The Journal of Somaesthetics 9/1-2 (2023), p. 39-45.
"For the first time, a book is devoted entirely to the practical and performative dimension of Shusterman’s somaesthetics. This is important because the aforementioned dimension is rich and complex, with several ramifications, including the question of performance, the question of popular arts and hip hop in particular, and the political question [...] The book does more than describe somaesthetics [...] It also allows its authors to criticize its foundations, open up debates, and/or propose the extension or reform some of its features, to put forward new theses whose ambition is to advance pragmatism on a general scale. [...] A book whose reading is undoubtedly experienced as an active, somatic, and affective experience." - Alice Dupas, in:
Pragmatism Today 14/2 (2023), p. 85-89.
"Abrams has managed to compile a book that captures the immense complexity of Shusterman’s philosophy, art, and life (while still making no claim to completeness) [...] Although less than three hundred pages in length, the contents of the Abrams volume are extremely comprehensive and wide-ranging. This is due to the great choice of the authors of the texts, who are both true experts in Shusterman’s philosophy and undisputed experts in their respective fields of knowledge, which is reflected in the quality of the individual chapters of the book. [...] The added value of Abrams’ book is that the reader feels that Shusterman is somehow suddenly closer to him. Even though he knows him as a world renowned figure in contemporary philosophy, he suddenly sees him as a human being – a philosopher and an artist (in the conjunction of all of the above words) whose life creates philosophy, and whose philosophy is created by his life" - Lukáš Arthur Švihura, in:
The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 12/2 (2023) [
Full review]
"Jerold J. Abrams’s edited volume
Shusterman’s Somaesthetics: From Hip Hop Philosophy to Politics and Performance Art, recently published in the Brill series ‘Studies in Somaesthetics,’ aims (and, in my opinion, definitely succeeds) to offer a broad overview and a detailed interpretation of Richard Shusterman’s decades-long, thematically wide and pluralist, and quite often theoretically challenging, philosophical path." - Stefano Marino, in:
The Slovak Journal of Aesthetics 12/2 (2023) [
Full review]
2 From Pragmatism to Somaesthetics as Philosophy
Alexander Kremer
3 Somaesthetics, Somapower, and the Microphysics of Emancipation
Leszek Koczanowicz
4 Living Beauty, Rethinking Rap
Revisiting Shusterman’s Philosophy of Hip Hop Max Ryynänen
5 Somaesthetics and Pathic Aesthetics
Tonino Griffero
6 Eating as an Aesthetic Activity
Somaesthetics and Food Studies Dorota Koczanowicz
part 2 Performative Philosophy and the Man in Gold 7 Somaesthetics, Photography, and the Man in Gold
Jerold J. Abrams
8 An Exquisitely Beautiful Longing
A Lacanian Reading of The Adventures of the Man in Gold
Diane Richard-Allerdyce
9 Shusterman as Philosopher and the Man in Gold
Yvonne Bezrucka
10 The Golden Turn in Shusterman’s Somaesthetics
The Magical Figure of the Man in Gold Else Marie Bukdahl
11 On Shusterman’s Somaesthetic Practice
The Case of the Man in Gold Yang Lu
12 Somaesthetics and Cinema
The Man in Gold in the Film Walk the Golden Night
Jerold J. Abrams
part 3 Shusterman in His Own Words 13 Somaesthetics, Pragmatism, and the Man in Gold
Remarks on the Preceding Chapters Richard Shusterman
14 On the Path of Somaesthetics
An Interview with Richard Shusterman Yanping Gao
Index
This volume will be of interest to undergraduates, graduate students, professors, working in American philosophy, aesthetics (including popular art), and embodiment.