218 Pages
    by Routledge

    218 Pages
    by Routledge

    In a series of intriguing essays ranging over terror, State fetishism, shamanic healing in Latin America, homesickness, and the place of the tactile eye in both magic and modernity, anthropologist Michael Taussig puts into representational practice a curious type of engaged writing. Based on a paranoiac vision of social control and its understanding as in a permanent state of emergency leaving no room for contemplation between signs and things, these essays hover between story-telling and high theory and thus create strange new modes of critical discourse. The Nervous System will appeal to writers, scholars, artists, film makers, and readers interested in critical theory, aesthetics, and politics.

    Chapter 1 Why the Nervous System?; Chapter 2 Terror as Usual: Walter Benjamin's Theory of History as State of Siege; Chapter 3 Violence And Resistance In The Americas: The Legacy Of Conquest; Chapter 4 An Australian Hero; Chapter 5 Cane Toads: an Unnatural History; Chapter 6 Reification and The Consciousness of The Patient; Chapter 7 Maleficium :State Fetishism; Chapter 8 Tactility and Distraction; Chapter 9 Homesickness & Dada;

    Biography

    Michael Taussig is Professor at Columbia University.

    "Taussig's masterful essays should be read by any scholar and in any class concerned with an anthropology of the present." -- American Anthropologist