Beschreibung
What is the role of images, imagination, and the imaginary for our understanding of the world, of other humans, and of human subjectivity? What meaning do they have for everyday life, literature, and the arts? Christoph Wulf shows: Processes of imagination and of the imaginary contribute to the shaping of humans, their societies, and their cultures. They are closely connected to practices of the body and to its performativity. Taking into account games, rituals, and gestures, as well as families and domestic bliss, it becomes clear: social and cultural practices are learned, stored, and changed through mimetic processes, i.e. through creative imitation - and they become a part of the individual and collective imagination as images.
Autorenportrait
Christoph Wulf (Dr. phil.) ist Professor für Anthropologie und Erziehung und Mitglied des Interdisziplinären Zentrums für Historische Anthropologie an der Freien Universität Berlin. Seine Arbeitsschwerpunkte sind Historische Anthropologie, Pädagogische Anthropologie, Interkulturelle Bildung, Mimesis- und Imaginationsforschung, Performativitäts- und Ritualforschung, ästhetische und interkulturelle Erziehung.