Dizziness: A Resource

Dizziness is more than feeling dizzy. In this multidisciplinary reader, artists, philosophers, and researchers from a range of experimental sciences and cultural studies trace dizziness not only as a phenomenon of sensory input impacting our vestibular system, but also as a twofold phenomenon of “se...

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Hauptverfasser: Eva Blimlinger, Andrea B. Braidt, Karin Riegler, Ruth Anderwald, Karoline Feyertag, Leonhard Grond, François Jullien, Jarosław Lubiak, Marcus Steinweg, Oliver A. I. Botar, Davide Deriu, Sarah Kolb, Rebekka Ladewig, Mathias Benedek, Maya M. Shmailov, Maria Spindler, Alice Pechriggl, Katrin Bucher Trantow, Oliver Ressler, Iris Weißenböck, Niamh Dunphy, Surface (Frankfurt am Main/Berlin)
Format: Text Resource
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dizziness is more than feeling dizzy. In this multidisciplinary reader, artists, philosophers, and researchers from a range of experimental sciences and cultural studies trace dizziness not only as a phenomenon of sensory input impacting our vestibular system, but also as a twofold phenomenon of “sense”—creating meaning and triggering emotions. It is an interdependence of sense and sensing, of cultural constructs and sensuality, of somatic and cognitive knowledge, that can only be conceived of as a complex relation of both formation and dissolution, habituations and transformations, pertaining to our shared reality and our individual experiences. This is further reflected in the programmatic claim that states of dizziness can be seen as a resource.