In Anthony Steinbock & Natalie Depraz (eds.),
Surprise: An Emotion? Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 83-95 (
2018)
Copy
BIBTEX
Abstract
Abstract: Of the five perspectives set forth in this essay, four of them specify obstacles
that block experiential understandings of emotions. The obstacles in one way
and another subvert the living body, whether presenting it as a mere face or as an
ahistorical adult body, as an embodied phenomenon or as a brain unattached to a
whole-body nervous system. Such accounts bypass the affective dynamics that
move through bodies and move them to move. Being true to the truths of experience,
the fifth perspective, requires recognition of our infancy and even of our prenatal
lives, both of which are tethered to developmental movement. It furthermore
requires recognition of affective realties as subject-world relationships and recognition
of the dynamic congruency of emotions and movement. In the end, the perspectives
lead us to inquire about “the things themselves.”
Keywords: Animate · Dynamic · Brain · Embodied · Infancy