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Mirror-Touch Synaesthesia: Thresholds of Empathy with Art

4.50 (2 ratings by Goodreads)

English

The neurological condition synaesthesia (the mixing of the senses) has for over a century provoked thought about new ways of artistic seeing. In 'Mirror-Touch Synaesthesia: Thresholds of Empathy with Art', a recently discovered manifestation provides a lens through which to re-examine contemporary art experience. People with mirror-touch synaesthesia feel a physical sense of touch on their own bodies when they witness touch to other people and often to objects. The condition is a rare yet recognizable form of heightened physical empathy: present in just 1 in 75 people, it is associated with an overactivation of the near-universal mirror (neuron) system. Mirror-Touch Synaesthesia places mirror-touch, a social synaesthesia, at the center of dialogue between neuroscience, the humanities, and contemporary art theory and practice in order to explore, for the first time, its powerful potential as a model for the embodied and relational spectatorship of art. Mirror-Touch Synaesthesia brings together essays and conversations by prominent neuroscientists, anthropologists, artists, art theorists, curators, film theorists, and philosophers, as well as mirror-touch synaesthetes, and through proximity, and cross-disciplinary dialogue, dissolves barriers not only between disciplines but between theory and experience. Essays and conversations find common ground not only in quantitative but also qualitative accounts of mirror-touch; the editor has conducted the first set of in-depth, semi-structured interviews with mirror-touch synaesthetes, which is available in excerpted form in the volume's appendix. This collection of thirteen conversations constitutes a performative project at the boundary between art and science that invites contributors to reconceptualize the ways that artworks invite us into relational, co-constitutional forms of spectatorship. Critically refiguring arguments about the 'social turn' in contemporary art that reject the traditional viewer as passive, Mirror-Touch Synaesthesia expands the possibilities of what art we might call 'participatory', and enriches debates around the social agency of perception. In these essays, the blurred thresholds in mirror-touch between sight and touch, and between self and other, are redrawn for an interdisciplinary readership as newly sensitized boundaries between image and action, art and life. See more
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Age Group_Uncategorizedautomatic-updateB01=Daria MartinCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=APFACategory=HPNCategory=JHMCategory=JMAFCategory=JMRPCategory=PSANCOP=United KingdomDelivery_Delivery within 10-20 working daysLanguage_EnglishPA=AvailablePrice_€50 to €100PS=Activesoftlaunch
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Product Details
  • Weight: 956g
  • Dimensions: 184 x 259mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780198769286

About

Daria Martin artist has researched mirror-touch synaesthesia since 2008 and made it the centre of three films: Sensorium Tests (2012) At the Threshold (2014-2015) and Theatre of the Tender (2016). Martin's films which have been exhibited around the world aim to create a continuity between disparate artistic media (such as painting and performance) between people and objects and between internal and social worlds. Solo exhibitions include ACCA Melbourne; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; the New Museum New York; the Hammer Museum Los Angeles; Kunstalle Zürich; and Tate Britain. Martin is currently Professor and Head of Artistic Research at the Ruskin School of Art University of Oxford. : In 2018 she won the Film London Jarman Award for creating an eclectic and expansive body of work that has explored everything from dreams and mythology to technology and feminism.

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