Acknowledgements Notes on Notes Introduction: Exposing the Corporeal Roots of Historical Materialism and Moving toward a Corporeal Semiotics Part 1 Reconstructing Historical Materialism 'Up from the Body': The Corporeal Foundations of a Materialist Conception of History and the Guiding Threads of a Historical-Materialist Wissenschaft Introduction to Part 1 1 An Aufhebung of Philosophy and the Genesis of a Materialist Conception of History: Objectification and Marx's Corporeal Turn 2 From the First Corporeal Fact of Human Being to the Moments of History: Corporeality, Modes of Objectification, and Ways of Worldmaking 3 The Dimensions and Methodological Leitfaden of a Historical-Materialist Wissenschaft Part 2 Mapping Human Corporeal Organisation Introduction to Part 2. Toward a Historical-Materialist Cartography of Human Corporeal Organisation 4 The Body Is Not a Tabula Rasa: Clearing a Path toward a 'Hidden Bodily Problematic' 5 Toward a Corporeal Cartography: Methodological Preliminaries 6 Toward a Historical-Materialist Cartography of Human Corporeal Organisation (in Outline): On the Corporeal Constitution of Patterns of Human Experience, Behaviour, and Realities 7 On the Corporeal Constitutions of Cognition and Subjecthood Conclusion to Part 2: What It Is Like To Be a Human: Corporeally-Constituted Patterns of Human Experience and Subjecthood Part 3 Toward a Corporeal Semiotics Introduction to Part 3 8 The 'Linguistic Turn' and Its Discontents: A Critique of Disembodied Semiotics 9 The 'Cultural Turn' and Its Discontents: A Critique of Disembodied Cultural Studies 10 Artefacts as Corporeal Signs; toward a Corporeal Semiotics Conclusion to Part 3: Corporeal Semiotics as Measure of Social Wealth and Socio-cultural Form: On Artefactual Beneficence and Mendacity Part 4 Corporeal Categories and the Critique of Sociocultural Form: Capital and Its Culture of Quantity Introduction to Part 4 11 Methodological Reflections on Forms of Social Objectivity and Subjectivity: Class, Class Consciousness, and the Critique of Capitalist Cultural Form 12 A 'Great Transformation': A Genealogy of Capital's Culture of Quantity 13 The Commodity Form, Quantification, and the Standpoint of Capital: An Archaeology of Capital's Culture of Quantity 14 The Capitalist Labour-Process and the Body in Pain: The Corporeal Depths of Marx's Concept of Immiseration Conclusion to Part 4: 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 Dignity Appendices References Index.
Bodies and Artefacts Vol 1 : Historical Materialism As Corporeal Semiotics