"This book employs several case studies - kings performing in ballets, sea captains dancing with natives, nationalists engaged in gymnastics exercises - to demonstrate what has been lost and what could be gained by a more embodied approach to living, to history. These curious movements were ways to be, to think, to know, to imagine, and to will. They highlight the limits of historical explanations focusing on cultural factors and question currently fashionable "cultural" and "post-modern" perspectives. Bodies, cognitive theory tells us, are the same regardless of historical context, and they engage in the same intentional activities. Returning to our bodies and their movements enables us not only to explain historical actions anew, but also to understand ourselves better"--
Erik Ringmar is Professor of Political Science at Ibn Haldun University, Istanbul, Turkey.
1. Moving bodies; 2. Being; 3. Thinking; 4. Knowing; 5. Imagining; 6. Willing; 7. The world that we made.