Tensional responsiveness: ecosomatic aliveness and sensitivity with human and more-than
In: Culture and social practice
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In: Culture and social practice
In: Kultur und soziale Praxis
How we sense and move our bodies shapes how we relate with each other. Current socio-economic practices are reducing generative qualities of relating. Doerte Weig shows how bodily capacities for sensitive tensional responsiveness are relevant to (re)generative cultures, the future of work, lifelong learning, sharing, healing and well-being. She draws together her own experience of living with Baka egalitarian foragers in North-Eastern Gabon, her corporate experience, and her studies on bodying, somatics and our connective tissue-system fascia. Interweaving neurophysiological shifting-sliding with a radically different ecosystemic awareness opens up potentials for bodying beyond current legal and political limits into enchantingly vibrant and ecosomatically alive futures.
How we sense and move our bodies shapes how we relate with each other. Current socio-economic practices are reducing generative qualities of relating. Doerte Weig shows how bodily capacities for sensitive tensional responsiveness are relevant to (re)generative cultures, the future of work, lifelong learning, sharing, healing and well-being. She draws together her own experience of living with Baka egalitarian foragers in North-Eastern Gabon, her corporate experience, and her studies on bodying, somatics and our connective tissue-system fascia. Interweaving neurophysiological shifting-sliding with a radically different ecosystemic awareness opens up potentials for bodying beyond current legal and political limits into enchantingly vibrant and ecosomatically alive futures.
In: Body & society, Band 26, Heft 3, S. 94-109
ISSN: 1460-3632
This commentary introduces fascia, our bodily connective tissue, as a contribution to thinking body as process beyond mind–body dualisms. Research in the field of Fascia Studies has shown that fascias' core qualities are shifting and sliding in tensional responsiveness and that its both/and tissue- and-system features challenge clear-cut definitions. Acknowledging these characteristics of human physiology in novel ways, and in particular fascia as our largest sensory organ, becomes relevant to ontologies, alterities and research methodologies emphasizing experience and transdisciplinarity. Importantly, the notion is never to theorize fascia as model or metaphor but as quotidian processual responsive proposition.
In: Culture and social practice
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Prologue -- Introducing INTENSITIES of RELATING -- Proposition One – BAKA EGALITARIANISM and GENERATIVE CONCEPTS OF BODYING -- Proposition Two – SHARING FOR ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL ONGOINGNESS -- Proposition Three – SINGING-DANCING GENDER RELATIONS AND GROUP HEALTH -- Proposition Four – OPENING WORLDS INTO ECOSOMATIC ALIVENESS -- Towards Aliveness - WHAT IS YOUR RESPONSE? -- Annex -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- References -- Index