TAILIEUCHUNG - Ebook Distinctions in the flesh - social class and the embodiment of inequality: Part 2

Part 2 book “Distinctions in the flesh - social class and the embodiment of inequality” has contents: The hungry body, the playful body, relaxation in tension, tension in relaxation, necessity incarnate, the visible and the invisible. | 5 The hungry body It is a falsification of significant features of human existence to say that people are omnivores. (Levins and Lewontin, 1985: 260) In an essay entitled Psycho-­Analysis and the History of Art (1953), the art historian Ernst Gombrich commits the somewhat sacrilegious act of likening the aesthetic experience to the one type of enjoyment from which modern aesthetics (ever since Kant) had vehemently tried to separate it, namely to the sensuous and visceral pleasures provided by food and eating: Botticelli’s Venus, or a self-­portrait by Rembrandt, clearly have other dimensions of meaning and embody different values – but when we speak of the problem of correct balance between too much and too little we do well to remember cookery. For it is here that we learn first that too much of a good thing is repellent. Too much fat, too much sweetness, too much softness – all the qualities, that is, that have an immediate biological appeal – also produce these counter-­reactions which originally serve as a warning signal to the human animal not to over-­indulge [. . .] I mean that we also develop it as a defence mechanism against attempts to seduce us. We find repellent what offers too obvious, too childish, gratification. It invites regression and we do not feel secure enough to yield [. . .] The child is proverbially fond of sweets and toffees, and so is the primitive, with his Turkish delight and an amount of fat that turns a European stomach. We prefer something less obvious, less yielding. My guess is, for instance, that small children and unsophisticated grown-­ups will be likely to enjoy a soft milk-­chocolate, while townified highbrows will find it cloying and seek escape in the more bitter tang or in an admixture of coffee or, preferably, of crunchy nuts. (Gombrich, 1985 [1953]: 39) Whatever one is to make of his speculations on the existence of innate ‘warning-­ signals’ or psychological ‘defence-­mechanisms’ (let alone his rather indiscriminate use

TAILIEUCHUNG - Chia sẻ tài liệu không giới hạn
Địa chỉ : 444 Hoang Hoa Tham, Hanoi, Viet Nam
Website : tailieuchung.com
Email : tailieuchung20@gmail.com
Tailieuchung.com là thư viện tài liệu trực tuyến, nơi chia sẽ trao đổi hàng triệu tài liệu như luận văn đồ án, sách, giáo trình, đề thi.
Chúng tôi không chịu trách nhiệm liên quan đến các vấn đề bản quyền nội dung tài liệu được thành viên tự nguyện đăng tải lên, nếu phát hiện thấy tài liệu xấu hoặc tài liệu có bản quyền xin hãy email cho chúng tôi.
Đã phát hiện trình chặn quảng cáo AdBlock
Trang web này phụ thuộc vào doanh thu từ số lần hiển thị quảng cáo để tồn tại. Vui lòng tắt trình chặn quảng cáo của bạn hoặc tạm dừng tính năng chặn quảng cáo cho trang web này.