Title
Sensuous Scholarship
Files
Description
Among the Songhay of Mali and Niger, who consider the stomach the seat of personality, learning is understood not in terms of mental activity but in bodily terms. Songhay bards study history by "eating the words of the ancestors," and sorcerers learn their art by ingesting particular substances, by testing their flesh with knives, by mastering pain and illness. In Sensuous Scholarship Paul Stoller challenges contemporary social theorists and cultural critics who—using the notion of embodiment to critique Eurocentric and phallocentric predispositions in scholarly thought—consider the body primarily as a text that can be read and analyzed. Stoller argues that this attitude is in itself Eurocentric and is particularly inappropriate for anthropologists, who often work in societies in which the notion of text, and textual interpretation, is foreign.
ISBN
978-0-8122-1615-8
Publication Date
1997
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
City
Philadelphia, PA
Disciplines
Social and Cultural Anthropology
Recommended Citation
Stoller, Paul, "Sensuous Scholarship" (1997). College of Arts & Sciences Faculty Books. 22.
https://digitalcommons.wcupa.edu/casfaculty_books/22