Primo Levi's Narratives of Embodiment

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A01=Charlotte Ross
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Animal Kingdom
AOI
Artifi Cial Womb
Author_Charlotte Ross
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Bare Life
boundaries of human self and body
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Category=FL
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cyborg identity studies
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embodiment in literature
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Fi Rst Fl Ight
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HAL
Holocaust survivor narratives
Irrational Rationality
La Tregua
Levi's Accounts
Levi's Narratives
Levi's Story
Levi's Thought
Levi's Work
Levi's Writing
levis
Levi’s Accounts
Levi’s Narratives
Levi’s Story
Levi’s Thought
Levi’s Work
Levi’s Writing
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materiality and subjectivity
Posthuman Embodiment
posthumanism theory
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Science Fi Ction
Science Fi Ction Stories
Science Fi Ction Writer
science fiction analysis
Sentient Technologies
stories
tregua
Unifi Ed Culture
Versifi Er
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Young Man
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780415880411
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This innovative reading of Primo Levi’s work offers the first sustained analysis in English of his representations of bodies and embodiment. Discussion spans the range of Levi’s works — from testimony to journalism, from essays to science fiction stories — identifying and tracing multiple narratives of embodiment and disembodiment across his oeuvre. These narratives range from the abject, disembodied condition of prisoners in Auschwitz, to posthuman or cyborg individuals, whose bodies merge with technological devices. Levi’s representations of bodies are explored in relation to theories of embodiment and posthumanism, bringing his work into new dialogue with critical discourses on these issues. Taking inspiration from Levi’s definition of the human being as a constructor of containers, as well as from the recurring references to both material and metaphorical containing structures in his work, the book suggests that for Levi, embodiment involves constant negotiations of containment. He depicts the complex relationships between physical and social bodies, the material and the immaterial self, the conscious and unconscious subject, the organic and the technologically-enhanced body, engaging with evolving understandings of the boundaries of the body, the self, and the human.

Charlotte Ross is a lecturer in Italian Studies at the University of Birmingham, UK. She is co-editor of Resisting the Tide: Cultures of Opposition in the Berlusconi Years.

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