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Palgrave Macmillan

Embodying Difference

Critical Phenomenology and Narratives of Disability, Race, and Sexuality

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  • © 2022

Overview

  • Relates the emerging field of critical phenomenology to literary and cultural studies
  • Negotiates between post-structuralism and phenomenology
  • Addresses the role of the body and lived experience in textual analyses

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This book explores how phenomenological ideas about embodiment, perception, and lived experience are discussed within disability studies, critical race theory, and queer studies. Building on these disciplines, it offers readings of memoirs and novels that address the consequences of stigmatization and the bodily dimensions of social differences. The texts include Robert F. Murphy’s The Body Silent, Simi Linton’s My Body Politic, Rod Michalko’s The Two-in-One: Walking with Smokie, Walking with Blindness, three memoirs by Stephen Kuusisto, Vincent O. Carter’s The Bern Book, as well as two novels, Matthew Griffin’s Hide and Armistead Maupin’s Maybe the Moon. All of the texts discussed in this book negotiate the significance of bodily and perceptual habits, the influence of language and culture on embodiment, the importance of relationality and community, the severe effects of misrecognition, and the possibilities of emancipation and socialrecognition. Hence, they are read as pioneering contributions to the emerging field of critical phenomenology.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Gender and Diversity Studies, Folkwang University of the Arts, Essen, Germany

    Simon Dickel

About the author

Simon Dickel is Professor of Gender and Diversity Studies at Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, Germany. He is the author of Black/Gay: The Harlem Renaissance, the Protest Era, and Constructions of Black Gay Identity in the 1980s and 90s (2011).

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