The corporeal identity when the self-image hurts
Why do so many people feel uneasy when they look in the mirror or see pictures of themselves? The contrast between their body and the way they imagine it to be, or the way they wish it were, may account for their malaise. This contrast might even be the starting point for various kinds of psychologi...
Autor principal: | |
---|---|
Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
Springer New York : Imprint: Springer
2013.
|
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009468272806719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- The Corporeal Identity; Foreword; Preface; Contents; Chapter 1: Integrated Bodies; 1.1 Individual and Communal Bodies; 1.2 "Mind" in "Body"; Chapter 2: Disciplined Bodies; 2.1 The Socio-genesis of Psycho-pathology; 2.2 The process of Bodies Medicalization; 2.3 New Labels for New Deviancies; Chapter 3: Metaphorical Bodies: The Body-Object; 3.1 Pre-Platonic and Pre-Cartesian Bodies; 3.2 Cartesian Dualism and Its Patrimony; 3.2.1 Limitations of the Dualism Model (taken from Galimberti, 1979, pp. 51 and 55); 3.3 David Hume's Ideas of "Self"
- 3.4 Maurice Merleau-Ponty's Irreducibility of the Body to an Object3.5 Overcoming Irreducibility of the Body to Object Through Phenomenology; 3.6 "Phenomenological Remains" and the "Intentionality of Consciousness"; 3.7 The Crisis of Western Sciences; 3.8 Ludwig Binswanger's Existential Analysis; Chapter 4: Body and Identity; 4.1 Individual Appearance, the Scene of Identity; 4.2 Bodies and Linguistic Signs; 4.3 The Semiotics of the Face; 4.4 The Meaning of Fashion and its Correlation to Linguistic Usage; 4.5 The Interaction Perspective; 4.5.1 Symbolic Interaction
- 4.5.2 Self-Aspect in Symbolic Interaction4.5.3 Appearance, Discourse and Signi fi cance; 4.6 Body Inter-Subjectivity; 4.6.1 Identity-Forming Processes; 4.6.2 Body Awareness; 4.6.3 The Birth of Sense of Identity in Psychology; 4.6.4 Body Representation in the Medical Field; 4.6.5 Body Representation in the Field of Psychology; 4.6.5.1 Body Images; 4.6.6 Identity and Physical Self-Ef fi cacy; Chapter 5: Body Identity Disorders; 5.1 Dysmorphophobias: When Form is Content; 5.1.1 The Use and Abuse of the "Dysmorphophobia" Concept; 5.2 Books and Covers: When the Concept Becomes the Meaning
- 5.3 The Game of "What If..."5.3.1 ...A Perception Disorder; 5.3.2 ...A Cognitive Disorder; 5.3.3 ...An Affective-Relational Disorder; 5.3.4 ...A Cultural Disorder; Chapter 6: Bodies Beyond Measure: Clinical Disclosure; 6.1 "Perceptive" Methods; 6.1.1 Methods Used to Estimate Parts of the Body; 6.1.2 Global Estimation Methods; 6.1.2.1 Virtual Reality; 6.2 Attitudinal Methods; 6.2.1 Self-Report Questionnaires; 6.2.2 Projective Methods; 6.2.3 Constructivist Techniques; Chapter 7: Dysmorphophobias and Identity: A Theoretical Reading; 7.1 Monologues Before the Mirror; 7.1.1 My Battle Scars
- 7.1.2 "I Know What You See, I Am What You See"7.2 Mutant and Replicant Identities; Bibliography; Index