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Embodied Cognition and Communication: studies with British fine woodworkers

Marchand, Trevor H.J.

Authors

Trevor H.J. Marchand



Abstract

The approach to embodied cognition and communication presented in this study of carpentry practices among English woodwork tutors and trainees is an agent-centred one. I describe the cognitive operations that make possible both the enactment and understanding of practice by focussing on the way that received somatic information is ‘interpreted’ from the body. It is proposed that the flow of human movement, like the stream of words in an utterance, is segmentable in that it can be broken down into component actions, gestures and postures that unfold dynamically in space and time. The point of my argument is that physical practice communicates and therefore, like language, its component elements can be parsed by an observing party and acquired as mental representations by their motor domains of cognition. Motor representations yield embodied simulations of actions, or they can be systematically re-combined with the effect of producing physical imitation or novel articulations of knowledge-in-practice. Notably the compositional nature of mental representations underlies the ongoing and novel production of knowledge.

Citation

Marchand, T. H. (2010). Embodied Cognition and Communication: studies with British fine woodworkers. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 16(s1), 100-120. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2010.01612.x

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date May 1, 2010
Deposit Date Feb 11, 2009
Journal Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Print ISSN 1359-0987
Electronic ISSN 1467-9655
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 16
Issue s1
Pages 100-120
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2010.01612.x
Keywords embodied cognition, communication, apprenticeship, dynamic syntax, woodworking, carpentry, London, craft


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