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Ordinary things and their extraordinary meanings / edited by Giuseppina Marsico (University of Salerno), Luca Tateo (Aalborg University).

EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Marsico, Giuseppina, editor.
Tateo, Luca, editor.
Series:
Annals of cultural psychology.
Annals of cultural psychology
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Material culture--Psychological aspects.
Material culture.
Material culture--Social aspects.
Relevance.
Meaning (Psychology).
Physical Description:
1 online resource (318 pages).
Place of Publication:
Charlotte, North Carolina : Information Age Publishing, Inc., [2019]
Summary:
The book provides a new look at the everyday relationship between psychological processes and extraordinary aspects of ordinary phenomena. Why should we deal with ordinary things? People's life is made of everyday practical, taken-for-granted things, such as driving a car, using money, listening music, etc. When you drive from home to workplace, you are migrating between contexts. Is this an empty space you are crossing, or the time you spend into the car is something meaningful?In psychological terms, things have, at least, three levels of existence, a material, a symbolic and an affective one. The underlying idea is that the symbolic elaboration of everyday things is characterized by the transcendence of the particular object-sign, leading to the creation of more and more complex sign fields. These fields expand according to an inclusive logic up to dialogically and dialectically incorporate opposites (i.e. clean/dirty, transparent/opaque, hide/ show, join/divide, slow/fast, etc.). Even the meaning of "ordinary" and "extraordinary" follow such an inclusive logic: if you give a positive value to ordinary, extraordinary is rule-breaking; otherwise, if ordinary means trivial, extraordinary assumes a positive value. Besides, things are cultural artifacts mediating the experience of the world, the psychological processes and the construction of mind. Reflecting upon "things" is thus a more meaningful pathway to understand Psyche.
Contents:
Series editors
Preface: How can things be ordinary? Introduction: Framing AI? theory of ordinary and extraordinary in cultural psychology / Luca Tateo and Giuseppina Marsico
Chapter 1. On the border for hiding and revealing: Dialogues through underwear / Jaan Valsiner
Chapter 2. The magic of holes / Achille C. Varzi
Chapter 3. The pornographic gaze and the sense of listening / Sven Hroar Klempe
Chapter 4. The poetic resonance of an instant: Making sense of experience and existence through the emotional value of encounters / Olga V. Lehmann
Chapter 5. Words and numbers and their singular multiplicity / Marco Tonti
Chapter 6. The pen: How cultural objects become semiotically impregnated / Ana Cecília de Sousa Bastos and Maria Angélica Gonçalves Coutinho
Chapter 7. Lotteries, betting, coca-cola, and octopus paul: The extraordinary side of the ordinary / Sergio Salvatore
Chapter 8. Money for ordinary things
clean or dirty? Money: Ordinary things but deeply culturally embedded phenomenon / Tatsuya Sato, Hideaki Kasuga, and Akinobu Nameda
Chapter 9. Clocks, watch, or something else? / Ruggero Andrisano Ruggieri and Claudia Venuleo
Chapter 10. Through the looking glass: Monitor and display / Luca Tateo
Chapter 11. One mirror, no mirror, one hundred thousand mirrors / Maria Virgínia Dazzani, Waldomiro Silva Filho, and José Carlos Ribeiro
Chapter 12. Why is the Virgin Mary not an ordinary mother? Finding otherness and selfness in the sacred triangle / Koji Komatsu
Chapter 13. What may we see from the window or what AI? window may show to us? / Kirill S. Maslov
Chapter 14. The balcony / Giuseppina Marsico
Chapter 15. A discussion about musical instruments: Prostheses of body, prostheses of culture: Objects or processes / Raffaele De Luca Picione
About the Contributors.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
Print version record.
ISBN:
1-64113-684-7

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