S02 Episode 1: Gil Hedley on integral human anatomy, fascia and the link between body fat and consumer culture
Release Date: 02/15/2019
Remember Your Body
Johannes Birringer, Professor of Performance Technologies at Brunel University, talks to Eline Kieft about his journey into combining dance and performance with technologies
info_outline S02 Episode 07: Juhani Pallasmaa on experiencing architecture through art and sensing, the mind-body continuum and architecture as a giftRemember Your Body
Juhani Pallasmaa on why art and a multi sensory approach are at the heart of architecture.
info_outline S02 Episode 6: Peter Merriman on mobility studies and the social, cultural and political dimensions of everyday movementRemember Your Body
In Episode 6 of Series 2, leading mobility studies expert Professor Peter Merriman, from Aberystwyth University, talks about the development of the discipline as a field of study in the social sciences, why taking an interdisciplinary approach is important to him and his drive to understand the social, cultural and political dimensions of everyday movement and their impact on national identity and nationalism.
info_outline S02 Episode 05: Auxiliadora Gálvez on how profound spatial awareness learned from choreography and the Feldenkrais Method inspires the practice and teaching of radical sustainable architectureRemember Your Body
Auxiliadora Gálvez on using Feldenkrais training for an embodies approach to architecture.
info_outline S02 Episode 4: Arawana Hayashi on social presencing, improvisation and paying attention to each other in organizational settings, and connecting body and mind for a more awareness-based societyRemember Your Body
Arawana Hayashi on using arts, meditation and social justice in organisational settings and encouraging change through a move towards compassion- and awareness-based systems.
info_outline S01 Episode 04: Tim Ingold on The crisis of ethnography, the problem with embodiment, human becomings and exploding cellosRemember Your Body
Tim Ingold, Professor of Social Anthropology at University of Aberdeen, talks to Ben Spatz about the difference between anthropology and ethnography, the importance of collaboration, skilled practice and playing the cello, why he finds the idea of the body problematic, and why he thinks of people as human becomings rather than beings.
info_outline S02 Episode 03: Brian Massumi and Erin Manning on the economic challenge to collectively reorganize how we value moneyRemember Your Body
In Part 2 of our interview with Erin Manning and Brian Massumi we talk about the emerging 3 Ecologies Process Seed Bank, and how post-Blockchain technologies could reverse today’s economic balance, to collectively emphasize our qualities of experience, making monetary aspects peripheral to our everyday lives
info_outline S02 Episode 2: Erin Manning and Brian Massumi on critical somatic individualisation and why we need more movement in university education and architectureRemember Your Body
Erin Manning and Brian Massumi talk to Doerte Weig about schizo-somatic workshops at the Senselab, and how new ways of thinking and moving with relational openness and group subjectivity would benefit teaching and learning in universities of the future
info_outline S02 Episode 1: Gil Hedley on integral human anatomy, fascia and the link between body fat and consumer cultureRemember Your Body
In Episode 1 of Series 2 talks to Doerte Weig about how discovering our inner bodies allows us to experience our bodies as continuous, to accept muscles as scientific mental creations, to understand how our connective tissues fascia enables movement, and how with appreciation for our bodies we can even come to love our fat.
info_outline S01 Episode 03: Jonathan Skinner on Concerns regarding the body in fieldwork, analysis and writingRemember Your Body
Dr Jonathan Skinner from Roehampton University talks to Eline Kieft about how dance has become integral to his research and teaching.
info_outlineIn Episode 1 of Series 2 Gil Hedley talks to Doerte Weig about how discovering our inner bodies allows us to experience our bodies as continuous, to accept muscles as scientific mental creations, to understand how our connective tissues fascia enables movement, and how with appreciation for our bodies we can even come to love our fat.