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Table of Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Part I: Internal Horizons
Chapter 2. Bibliometric Analysis of the Phenomenology Literature
Chapter 3. Phenomenology Park: The Landscape of Husserlian Phenomenology
Chapter 4. Constitution through Noema and Horizon: Husserl's Theory of Intentionality
Chapter 5. The Problem of the Unity of a Manifold in the Development of Husserl's Philosophy
Chapter 6. Heideggerian Phenomenology
Chapter 7. The Landscape of Merleau-Pontyan Thought
Chapter 8. Beyond "Dreydegger": The Future of Anglo-American Existential Phenomenology
Chapter 9. Grenzprobleme of Phenomenology: Metaphysics
Part II: External Horizons: Embodiment and Identity
Chapter 10. Phenomenology at the Intersection of Gender and Race
Chapter 11.The Phenomenology of Zozobra: Mexican and Latinx Philosophers on (Not) Being at Home in the World
Chapter 12. Merleau-Ponty and Standpoint Theory
Part III: External Horizons: The Arts
Chapter 13. Are Artists Phenomenologists? Perspectives from Edith Landmann-Kalischer and Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Chapter 14. The Reading Process: An Intertextual Approach
Chapter 15. Phenomenology and Architecture: Examining Embodied Experience and Graphic Representations of the Built Environment
Part IV: External Horizons: Archaeology and Anthropology
Chapter 16. The Life and Afterlife of Phenomenology in Archaeological Theory and Practice
Chapter 17. Reconstructing Past Phenomenology Using Virtual Reality
Chapter 18. Anthropological Phenomenology and the Eventive Ground.
Part I: Internal Horizons
Chapter 2. Bibliometric Analysis of the Phenomenology Literature
Chapter 3. Phenomenology Park: The Landscape of Husserlian Phenomenology
Chapter 4. Constitution through Noema and Horizon: Husserl's Theory of Intentionality
Chapter 5. The Problem of the Unity of a Manifold in the Development of Husserl's Philosophy
Chapter 6. Heideggerian Phenomenology
Chapter 7. The Landscape of Merleau-Pontyan Thought
Chapter 8. Beyond "Dreydegger": The Future of Anglo-American Existential Phenomenology
Chapter 9. Grenzprobleme of Phenomenology: Metaphysics
Part II: External Horizons: Embodiment and Identity
Chapter 10. Phenomenology at the Intersection of Gender and Race
Chapter 11.The Phenomenology of Zozobra: Mexican and Latinx Philosophers on (Not) Being at Home in the World
Chapter 12. Merleau-Ponty and Standpoint Theory
Part III: External Horizons: The Arts
Chapter 13. Are Artists Phenomenologists? Perspectives from Edith Landmann-Kalischer and Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Chapter 14. The Reading Process: An Intertextual Approach
Chapter 15. Phenomenology and Architecture: Examining Embodied Experience and Graphic Representations of the Built Environment
Part IV: External Horizons: Archaeology and Anthropology
Chapter 16. The Life and Afterlife of Phenomenology in Archaeological Theory and Practice
Chapter 17. Reconstructing Past Phenomenology Using Virtual Reality
Chapter 18. Anthropological Phenomenology and the Eventive Ground.