
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2009
Pages: 343-360
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "Impaired embodiment and intersubjectivity", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 8 (3), 2009, pp. 343-360.


Impaired embodiment and intersubjectivity
pp. 343-360
in: Dorothée Legrand, Thor Grünbaum, Joel Krueger (eds), Dimensions of bodily subjectivity, Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 8 (3), 2009.Abstract
This paper considers the importance of the body for self-esteem, communication, and emotional expression and experience, through the reflections of those who live with various neurological impairments of movement and sensation; sensory deafferentation, spinal cord injury and Möbius Syndrome (the congenital absence of facial expression). People with severe sensory loss, who require conscious attention and visual feedback for movement, describe the imperative to use the same strategies to reacquire gesture, to appear normal and have embodied expression. Those paralysed after spinal cord injury struggle to have others see them as people rather than as people in wheelchairs and have been active in the disability movement, distinguishing between their medical impairment and the social induced disability others project onto them. Lastly those with Möbius reveal the importance of the face for emotional expression and communication and indeed for emotional experience itself. All these examples explore the crucial role of the body as agent for social and personal expression and self-esteem.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2009
Pages: 343-360
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "Impaired embodiment and intersubjectivity", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 8 (3), 2009, pp. 343-360.