DedicationAcknowledgementsIntroduction. Exposing the Corporeal Roots of Historical Materialism and Moving Toward a Corporeal SemioticsPart OneReconstructing Historical Materialism 'Up from the Body': The Corporeal Foundations of a Materialist Conception of Historyand the Guiding Threads of a Historical-Materialist WissenschaftIntroduction to Part OneChapter I. An Aufhebung of Philosophy and the Genesis of a Materialist Conception of History: Objectification and Marx's Corporeal Turn Chapter II. From the First Corporeal Fact of Human Being to the Moments of History: Corporeality, Modes of Objectification, and Ways of WorldmakingChapter III. The Dimensions and Methodological Leitfaden of a Historical-Materialist WissenschaftPart TwoMapping Human Corporeal Organisation Introduction to Part Two. Toward a Historical-materialist Cartography of Human Corporeal OrganisationChapter IV. The Body is Not a Tabula Rasa: Clearing a Path toward a 'Hidden Bodily Problematic'Chapter V. Toward a Corporeal Cartography: Methodological PreliminariesChapter VI.
Toward a Historical-Materialist Cartography of Human Corporeal Organisation (in Outline): On the Corporeal Constitution of Patterns of Human Experience, Behaviour, and RealitiesChapter VII. On the Corporeal Constitutions of Cognition and SubjecthoodConclusion to Part Two Part Three: Toward a Corporeal SemioticsIntroduction to Part Three Chapter VIII. The 'Linguistic Turn' and its Discontents: A Critique of Disembodied SemioticsChapter IX. The 'Cultural Turn' and its Discontents: A Critique of Disembodied Cultural StudiesChapter X. Artefacts as Corporeal Signs; Toward a Corporeal SemioticsConclusion to Part Three: Corporeal Semiotics as Measure of Social Wealth and Socio-cultural Form: On Artefactual Beneficence and MendacityPart FourCorporeal Categories and the Critique of Sociocultural Form: Capital and its Culture of QuantityIntroduction to Part Four Chapter XI. Methodological Reflections on Forms of Social Objectivity and Subjectivity: Class, Class Consciousness, and the Critique of Capitalist Cultural FormChapter XII. A 'Great Transformation': A Genealogy of Capital's Culture of QuantityChapter XIII. The Commodity Form, Quantification, and the Standpoint of Capital: An Archaeology of Capital's Culture of Quantity Chapter XIV.
The Capitalist Labour-Process and the Body in Pain: The Corporeal Depths of Marx's Concept of ImmiserationConclusion to Part Four: The Mendacity of the Vast Capitalist Artefact Anticipatory Notes in Conclusion: A Time to Pause, A Time to Reflect, A Time to Wish, A Time to Hope: Toward A Corporeally-Grounded Vision of Human Freedom and DignityAppendicesAppendices to IntroductionAppendices to Chapter IAppendices to Chapter IIAppendices to Chapter IIIAppendices to Chapter IVAppendices to Chapter VIAppendix to Chapter VIIAppendices to Chapter VIIIAppendices to Chapter IX.