The Brain's Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics

The Brain's Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics

by Victoria Pitts-Taylor
The Brain's Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics

The Brain's Body: Neuroscience and Corporeal Politics

by Victoria Pitts-Taylor

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

In The Brain's Body Victoria Pitts-Taylor brings feminist and critical theory to bear on new development in neuroscience to demonstrate how power and inequality are materially and symbolically entangled with neurobiological bodies. Pitts-Taylor is interested in how the brain interacts with and is impacted by social structures, especially in regard to race, class, gender, sexuality, and disability, as well as how those social structures shape neuroscientific knowledge. Pointing out that some brain scientists have not fully abandoned reductionist or determinist explanations of neurobiology, Pitts-Taylor moves beyond debates over nature and nurture to address the politics of plastic, biosocial brains. She highlights the potential of research into poverty's effects on the brain to reinforce certain notions of poor subjects and to justify particular forms of governance, while her queer critique of kinship research demonstrates the limitations of hypotheses based on heteronormative assumptions. In her exploration of the embodied mind and the "embrained" body, Pitts-Taylor highlights the inextricability of nature and culture and shows why using feminist and queer thought is essential to understanding the biosociality of the brain.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822361268
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 03/16/2016
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Victoria Pitts-Taylor is Professor of Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Wesleyan University and the author of Surgery Junkies: Wellness and Pathology in Cosmetic Culture.
 

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  ix

Introduction: The Social Brain and Corporeal Politics  1

1. The Phenomenon of Brain Plasticity  17

2. What Difference Does the Body Make?  43

3. I Feel Your Pain  67

4. Neurobiology and the Queerness of Kinship  95

Conclusion: The Multiplicity of Embodiment  119

Notes  129

References  153

Index  177

What People are Saying About This

Gut Feminism - Elizabeth A. Wilson

"The Brain’s Body brings clarity and sociological finesse to current debates about the role of neuroscientific data in public and intellectual life. With remarkable fluency, this book places the embodied specifics of race, class, disability, gender, and sexuality at the center of our responses to the brain sciences. This will be an indispensable and widely read guide for how to work with neurological data in the social sciences."
 

Brain Storm: The Flaws in the Science of Sex Differences - Rebecca M. Jordan-Young

"An exciting book, The Brain's Body adds wonderful new dimensions to the fruitful but still limited conversation between neuroscience and feminism while introducing readers to new literatures, novel interpretations, and exciting interweavings of arguments on key debates about neuroscience from a variety of fields. In generous and creative ways, Victoria Pitts-Taylor mines contemporary neuroscience for its nonreductionist potential, pointing out some of its clear resonances with feminist epistemologies. No one else has yet tackled in such depth the ways that emerging research regarding brain plasticity provide a strong empirical bridge between 'mainstream' science and feminist theory."
 

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