PLEASE NOTE: This is not a public event!
The corporeality of a human being—the body—and the human mind have for long been taken to be distinct. Both are, and have since been, core themes of philosophical and theological reflections on human existence and the meaning of life. Questions about what exactly characterizes humanaboutgs and determines their existence, their thinking, what is commonly referred to as “soul” or “spirit”, or their materiality, i.e. their body, become particularly pressing when it comes to filling the indeterminate spaces of life, to coping with experiences of contingency or in confrontations with one’s own mortality. The concept of “embodiment” discusses the body as a relationship between the physical body, the mind, and the environment, thus inviting us to rethink the role of the body in the shaping of cognition and in the understanding of the world.
In this year’s International Graduate Student Conference we encourage MA and PhD candidates from both institutions, the School of Humanities at SJTU and CATS, to discuss forms of embodiment through the lens of transculturality. Questions that could be considered under this topic are, for example:
1) How are certain concepts or ideas in a particular culture embodied in images, symbols, art forms?
2) How is the body (or what is related to the body) conceived in different times and cultures, and how do forms of embodiment interact, compete, or exclude each other in transcultural processes?
3) How do new technologies, such as AI, challenge concepts of the body and embodiment, and do they help us in developing a new understanding of the body