Image for Mono no Aware and Gender as Affect in Japanese Aesthetics and American Pragmatism

Mono no Aware and Gender as Affect in Japanese Aesthetics and American Pragmatism

See all formats and editions

Mono no Aware and Gender as Affect in Japanese Aesthetics and American Pragmatism places the naturalistic pragmatism of John Dewey in conversation with Motoori Norinaga's mono no aware, a Japanese aesthetic theory of experience, to examine gender as a felt experience of an aware, or an affective quality of persons.

By treating gender as an affect, Johnathan Charles Flowers argues that the experience of gendering and being gendered is a result of the affective perception of the organization of the body in line with cultural aesthetics embodied in Deweyan habit or Japanese kata broadly understood as culturally mediated transactions with the world.

On this view, how the felt sense of identity aligns with the affective organization of society determines the nature of the possible social transactions between individuals.

As such, this book intervenes in questions of personhood broadly-and identity specifically-by treating personhood itself as an affective sense.

In doing so, this book demonstrates how questions of personhood and identity are themselves affective judgments.

By treating gender and other identities as aware, this book advocates an expanded recognition of the how to be in the world through cultivating new ways of perceiving the affective organization of persons.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£76.80 Save 20.00%
RRP £96.00
Product Details
Lexington Books
1793626707 / 9781793626707
Hardback
144.3
15/04/2023
United States
English
414 pages
23 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More