Weitzenkorn, Rachel (Author)
Wilson, Elizabeth A. (Advisor)
Through the case of infant facial expression this dissertation offers a critical history of the scientific evidence of human behavior. Infant researchers are engaged in a creative process of translating emotions that are bodily, historical and cultural into identifiable entities that can be seen in and on the bodies of others. Important feminist work has demonstrated how this process dangerously reduces culturally specific emotions to inert and universal biological markers. Recently however, feminists have begun to reconsider scientific knowledge through practices, material arrangements, and 'on the ground' engagement with scientists. This renewed interest in materiality has focused on biological evidence such as the brain, the genome, and pharmaceuticals, with less critical engagement with the psychological sciences. Thus, a distinction between mind and body is maintained. This dissertation challenges this hierarchy by tracking the ways empirical observations of infant facial expressions travel between biological, psychological, and social understandings of behavior. It adds to feminist theorizing of the 'material body' through sustained attention on what material evidence is in our current moment. My research argues that non-expert empirical observations of bodily behaviors—blushing, looking, crying—become locations for mind outside of our disciplinary frameworks. This dissertation focuses on three infant researchers (René Spitz, Silvan Tomkins, and Ed Tronick) during the era leading up to contemporary neuroscience (1946-1980). Each used the mother-infant relationship to traffic between scientific psychology and interpretative psychoanalysis. Through two layers of source materials, this dissertation shows the contradictions of empirical evidence. First, it analyzes the images produced by each researcher—films, photographs, charts and diagrams. Next, it contextualizes this raw data through the disciplinary location of each researcher—the historical moment of U.S. psychology and changing political views of motherhood and subjectivity. Along with introducing a broadened conception of empirical evidence, this dissertation examines the behavioral sciences as a way to expose the hierarchies of evidence that currently infiltrate feminist projects. Furthermore, this project argues that empirical researchers, themselves, reveal intricate theories of evidence and sensory experience.
...More
Article
Courtney E. Thompson;
(2019)
Physogs: A Game with Consequences
Book
Rochelle Rives;
(2024)
The New Physiognomy: Face, Form, and Modern Expression
Article
Heewon Kim;
(2024)
Paul Ekman and the search for the isolated face in the 1960s
Book
Biess, Frank;
Gross, Daniel M;
(2014)
Science and Emotions after 1945: A Transatlantic Perspective
Book
Bok, Sissela;
(2010)
Exploring Happiness: From Aristotle to Brain Science
Article
Ginevra Sanvitale;
(2019)
Fear of Falling Behind and the Medicalization of Computer Attitudes in Cold War USA (1960s–1980s) (Angst vor dem Zurückbleiben. „Computerphobia“ in den USA während des Kalten Krieges (1960er bis 1980er Jahre))
Book
Sara Ahmed;
(2010)
The Promise of Happiness
Article
María Fernanda Olarte-Sierra;
(2019)
Of flesh and bone: Emotional and affective ethnography of forensic anthropology practices amidst an armed conflict
Article
Marisa G. Ruiz-Trejo;
Dau García-Dauder;
(2019)
Epistemic-corporeal workshops: Putting strong reflexivity into practice
Article
Smail, Daniel Lord;
(2014)
Neurohistory in Action: Hoarding and the Human Past
Book
Turner, Charles Henry;
Abramson, Charles I.;
Jackson, Latasha D.;
Fuller, Camille L.;
(2003)
Selected Papers and Biography of Charles Henry Turner, 1867-1923: Pioneer in the Comparative Animal Behavior Movement
Article
Engelhardt, Eliasz;
(2013)
Cerebrocerebellar System and Türck's Bundle
Article
Abraham, Tara H.;
(2006)
Cybernetics and Theoretical Approaches in 20th-century Brain and Behavior Sciences
Article
Giuseppe Sartori;
Giulia Melis;
(2022)
Deception in Court
Book
Rose, Nikolas S.;
Abi-Rached, Joelle M.;
(2013)
Neuro: The New Brain Sciences and the Management of the Mind
Article
Harry Smit;
(2020)
The Cartesian Conception of the Development of the Mind and Its Neo-Aristotelian Alternative
Article
Mark Elam;
(2015)
How the Brain Disease Paradigm Remoralizes Addictive Behaviour
Book
Farreras, Ingrid D.;
Hannaway, Caroline;
Harden, Victoria A.;
(2004)
Mind, Brain, Body, and Behavior: Foundations of Neuroscience and Behavioral Research at the National Institutes of Health
Book
Jacobson, Anne Jaap;
Maibom, Heidi Lene;
Bluhm, Robyn;
(2012)
Neurofeminism: Issues at the Intersection of Feminist Theory and Cognitive Science
Article
Luca Frigerio;
(2023)
Le emozioni e l'alienismo: Giovanni Clerici (1799-1868)
Be the first to comment!