Me and My Shadows: On the Accumulation of Body-Images in Western Society Part One - The Image and the Image of the Body in Pre-Modern Society

Body and Society 3 (3):1-31 (1997)
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Abstract

Granting that the `soul' was only an attractive and mysterious thought, from which philosophers rightly, but reluctantly, separated themselves - that which they have since learnt to put in its place is perhaps even more attractive and even more mysterious. The human body, in which the whole of the most distant and most recent past of all organic life once more becomes living and corporal, seems to flow through this past and right over it like a huge and inaudible torrent: the body is a more wonderful thought than the old `soul'. (Nietzsche, 1973: 132-3) Man is but breath and a shadow. (Sophocles)

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original Ferguson, Harvie (1997) "Me and My Shadows: On the Accumulation of Body-Images in Western Society Part Two - The Corporeal Forms of Modernity". Body and Society 3(4):1-31

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Citations of this work

Body Image/Body without Image.Mike Featherstone - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):233-236.

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References found in this work

Beyond Good and Evil.Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche - 1886 - New York,: Vintage. Edited by Translator: Hollingdale & J. R..
The Greeks and the Irrational.E. R. Dodds - 1951 - Philosophy 28 (105):176-177.
The Great Chain of Being.Arthur O. Lovejoy - 1936 - Science and Society 1 (2):252-256.

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