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This edited volume provides a biosemiotic analysis of the ecological relationship between food and medicine. Drawing on the origins of semiotics in medicine, this collection proposes innovative ways of considering aliments and treatments. Considering the ever-evolving character of our understanding of meaning-making in biology, and considering the keen popular interest in issues relating to food and medicines - fueled by an increasing body of interdisciplinary knowledge - the contributions here provide diverse insights and arguments into the larger ecology of organisms' engagement with and transformation through taking in matter. Bodies interpret molecules, enzymes, and alkaloids they intentionally and unintentionally come in contact with according to their pre-existing receptors. But their receptors are also changed by the experience. Once the body has identified a particular substance, it responds by initiating semiotic sequences and negotiations that fulfill vital functions for the organism at macro-, meso-, and micro-scales.
Human abilities to distill and extract the living world into highly refined foods and medicines, however, have created substances far more potent than their counterparts in our historical evolution. Many of these substances also lack certain accompanying proteins, enzymes, and alkaloids that otherwise aid digestion or protect against side-effects in active extracted chemicals. Human biology has yet to catch up with human inventions such as supernormal foods and medicines that may flood receptors, overwhelming the body's normal satiation mechanisms. This volume discusses how biosemioticians can come to terms with these networks of meaning, providing a valuable and provocative compendium for semioticians, medical researchers and practitioners, sociologists, cultural theorists, bioethicists and scholars investigating the interdisciplinary questions stemming from food and medicine.
First volume addressing the Biosemiotics of food or medicine, and how the two are related Combines insights from science, science studies, social science, and the humanities on the relevant topics of food and medicine Offers in-depth scholarship and diverse applications, valuable to Semioticians, sociologists, cultural theorists, philosophers of medicine and scholars investigating the interdisciplinary questions stemming from food and medicine
Auteur
Jonathan Hope (Ph.D.) is a professor in the literary studies department at the Université du Québec à Montréal (Canada). His teaching and research focus on semiotics, ecocriticism and the environmental humanities. Yogi Hendlin is assistant professor in the Erasmus School of Philosophy and Dynamics of Inclusive Prosperity Initiative at Erasmus University Rotterdam, research associate in the Environmental Health Initiative at the University of California, San Francisco, and Editor-in-Chief of the journal Biosemiotics."
Contenu
Chapter1 Introduction.- Chapter 2. From 'gastro-anomy' to 'food medicine': a biosemiotic approach to contemporary eating habits.- Chapter3. A biosemiotic perspective on the symbolic meanings of food and the nature/culture divide.- Chapter4. Free range humans: permaculture farming as a biosemiotic model for social organization.- Chapter5.Emerging omics data and food's interaction with the gut microbiome mediators.- Chapter6. Phytomedial intervention as a double biosemiotic road to health: towards a 'new paradigmatic' understanding of herbs in the healing process.- Chapter7. biosemiotic approach to medicine: the role of biological cognition and semiosis in the development of pathology.- chapter8. Biochemistry of desire: advertising to bacteria.- Chapter9. Biosemiosic caring in, from, with the sugar maple grove.- Chapter10. Biosemiosis and the sugar civilization.- Chapter 11. Phytosemiotics of medical marijuana.