5/30/2023 0 Comments Sartre 1943![]() ![]() To my mind, Scotland-Stewart is right on both of these points, and I want to use this reply to explore the second point in more depth. Second, she argues that Sartre’s notion of shame can shed light on Barnes/Parker’s self-alienation. First, she draws on Merleau-Ponty’s notion of bodily skill to show that Barnes/Parker’s disillusionment must be understood in the context of a traumatised body. In a response to my article, Scotland-Stewart (2021) develops this phenomenological interpretation in two important directions. Anatomy of a Soldier is, I argued, a phenomenological autobiography in which the author reveals how an individual’s subjectivity is extended across material and intersubjective space. In a recent article, I argued that this text should be understood from a phenomenological perspective (Gilks 2021). “Narrating Being through Phenomena: The Phenomenological and Sociological Insights of Harry Parker’s Anatomy of a Soldier.“ Social Epistemology 35 (5): 490–501. ![]()
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