In:Moving Ourselves, Moving Others: Motion and emotion in intersubjectivity, consciousness and language
Edited by Ad Foolen, Ulrike M. Lüdtke, Timothy P. Racine and Jordan Zlatev
[Consciousness & Emotion Book Series 6] 2012
► pp. v–vi
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Available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Published online: 12 April 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/ceb.6.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ceb.6.toc
Table of contents
Introduction
Prologue: Bodily motion, emotion and mind science
Part I. Consciousness
Fundamental and inherently interrelated aspects of animation
Could moving ourselves be the link between emotion and consciousness?
Visual perception and self-movement: Another look
Emotion regulation through the ages
Moving others matters
Part II. Intersubjectivity
Neurons, neonates and narrative: From empathic resonance to empathic understanding
Intersubjectivity in the lifeworld: Meaning, cognition, and affect
Primates, motion and emotion: To what extent nonhuman primates are intersubjective and why
Reaching, requesting and reflecting: From interpersonal engagement to thinking
Intuitive meaning: Supporting impulses for interpersonal life in the sociosphere of human knowledge, practice and language
Relational emotions in semiotic and linguistic development: Towards an intersubjective theory of language learning and language therapy
Part III. Language
The relevance of emotion for language and linguistics
From pre-symbolic gestures to language: Multisensory early intervention in deaf children
The challenge of complexity: Body, mind and language in interaction
(E)motion in the XVIIth century: A closer look at the changing semantics of the French verbs émouvoir and mouvoir
Metaphor and subjective experience: A study of motion-emotion metaphors in English, Swedish, Bulgarian, and Thai
Epilogue: Natural sources of meaning in human sympathetic vitality
Index
