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The Circular Structure of Power : Politics, Identity, Community (Phronesis Series)

Mutilating The Body:  Identity in Blood and InkMutilating the Body : Identity in Blood and Ink by Kim Hewitt

Mutilating the Body:  Identity in Blood and Ink

This scholarly discussion places acts of body mutilation within a conceptual framework that explores their similarities and dissimilarities, but ultimately interprets them as acts that ask to be witnessed. The author explores self-mutilation through history and across cultural divisions, finding these acts

The language of the body cannot be denied. In today's culture, many people are claiming their bodies as their prime material to create and express their identity--scratching, starving, tattooing, and piercing their desire for autonomy and spirituality upon their bodies. They instinctively turn to the body as a potent medium of flesh and blood, pleasurable and painful sensations, and adornment that enables them to write their stories upon their bodies.

About the Author
Kim Hewitt is a writer who is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in American Civilization at the University of Texas at Austin. Her interests include the history and influence of eastern philosophies in the United States, utopian communities, spirituality, and altered consciousness. 

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Cyborganization

An affirmation of the appended self.

Calculated.  Queerational.  Implicated.  Polyvocal.  Schizoid...

 

From Identity Politics to Social Feminism

Seyla Benhabib

Excerpt:

A decade ago a symposium took place at the Law School of the State University of New York at Buffalo as part of the James McCormick Mitchell Lecture Series. The participants were Carol J. Gilligan, Catharine A. MacKinnon, Ellen C. DuBois, Carrie J. Menkel-Meadow and others. This symposium sent a sharp signal of the great clash of paradigms within contemporary feminist theory which was about to unfold in the coming years. I will use the term “paradigm” in non-technical fashion to refer to a coherent set of assumptions, some articulated and some not, which guide, influence, structure, or help “format” a vision of theory and of politics... 

 

Identity:  An International Journal of Theory and Research

Identity is the official journal of the Society for Research on Identity Formation (SRIF). This cutting-edge new journal is published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates and is subsidized with grants from the Faculty of Social Science at the University of Western Ontario and the College of Arts and Science at Florida International University.

 

Identity Theory

Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Excerpt:

Identity theory is a position in the philosophy of mind which maintains that mental states and brain activities are identical, though viewed from two perspectives. Identity theory is a form of monistic materialism, insofar as it maintains that mind is essentially material in nature. As such, it is an alternative to classical dualism which holds that minds and mental events are made of a spiritual substance which is distinct from one's material body. Identity theory was developed to address the short comings of behaviorism, which maintains that mental terms designate dispositions to behave in certain ways. The key difference is that behaviorism denies mental states (focusing instead on only observable behavior); identity theory, by contrast, acknowledges mental states but identifies them with brain activity. Further, whereas behaviorism is usually seen as a semantic theory about the meaning of terms, identity theory is a scientific claim about mental states and brain activities themselves...

 

Identity Theory of Truth

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Excerpt:

The simplest and most general statement of the identity theory of truth is that when a truth-bearer (e.g. a proposition) is true, there is a truth-maker (e.g. a fact) with which it is identical and the truth of the former consists in its identity with the latter. The theory is best understood by contrast with a rival such as the correspondence theory, according to which the relation of truth-bearer to truth-maker is correspondence rather than identity...

 

Queer By Choice

A radical web community which introduces queer theory concepts and an unapologetic celebration of CHOOSING to be queer to a primarily non-academic audience.

 

Self-Concept -- Encyclopedia Britannica

Excerpt:

One of the most important aspects of a child's emotional development is the formation of his self-concept, or identity--namely, his sense of who he is and what his relation to other people is. The most conspicuous trend in children's growing self-awareness is a shift from concrete physical attributes to more abstract characteristics. This shift is apparent in those characteristics children emphasize when asked to describe themselves. Young children--four to six years of age--seem to define themselves in terms of such observable characteristics as hair color, height, or their favorite activities. But within a few years, their descriptions of themselves shift to more abstract, internal, or psychological qualities, including their competences and skills relative to those of others. Thus, as children approach adolescence, they tend to increasingly define themselves by the unique and individual quality of their feelings, thoughts, and beliefs rather than simply by external characteristics.

  

Patriarchy, Sexual Identity and the Sexual Revolution

By Ann Ferguson

Excerpt:

Adrienne Rich's paper "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence" suggests two important theses for further development by feminist thinkers. First, she maintains that compulsory heterosexuality is the central social structure perpetuating male domination. Second, she suggests a reconstruction of the concept lesbian in terms of a cross-cultural, transhistorical lesbian continuum which can capture women's ongoing resistance to patriarchal domination. Rich's paper is an insightful and significant contribution to the development of a radical feminist approach to patriarchy, human nature, and sexual identity. Her synthetic and creative approach is a necessary first step to further work on the concept of compulsory heterosexuality. Nonetheless, her position contains serious flaws from a socialist-feminist perspective. In this paper I shall argue against her main theses while presenting a different, historically linked concept of lesbian identity...

  

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