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Resilience and Responsiveness

Alfred’s Schutz’s Finite Provinces of Meaning

Michael Barber

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Springer Nature Switzerland img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / 20. und 21. Jahrhundert

Beschreibung

This book extends Alfred Schutz’s “On Multiple Realities” by describing the provinces of meaning of play, music, religious ritual, and African-American folkloric humor. Throughout these provinces, the author traces two themes: resilience and responsiveness. In resilience, individuals or communities run up against obstacles, imposed relevances, which they come to terms with, or give meaning to (in phenomenological parlance), by modifying, evading, overcoming, or accepting them. 

Responsiveness emerges from Schutz’s idea of making music together, which the author takes further by analyzing the mimetic encounter with the other and the asymmetries in listening to music, and, especially, by showing how the features of the cognitive style of music as a province of meaning affect sociality, disposing us to be more vulnerable and attentive to each other’s non-conceptual, musical meanings. This text appeals to upper-level undergraduate students and graduate students as well as to faculty in philosophy.

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Schlagwörter

alfred schutz, play and phenomenology, philosophy and race, music and phenomenology, on multiple realities, religious ritual and phenomenology, intersubjectivity and phenomenology, African-American folkloric humor and phenomenology, social philosophy