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Intro
Contents
Editors and Contributors
Editors
Contributors
Part I: Sociological Perspectives on the Senses
Broadening Horizons or New Blinders? On the Sensorial Turn in the Social Sciences
1 Cultural Turns in the Scientific Economy of Attention
2 The Sensorial Turn: Contours, Directions, Horizons
3 Sensory Perception, Cultural Over-Forming and Knowledge
4 About This Volume
References
The Obstinacy of the Senses
1 Preliminary Remark
2 Mediated Immediacy: Immediate Mediation
3 Image Interference
4 Transcendence
References

The Social Construction of Smells
1 Phenomenology of Olfactory Perception
2 Olfactory Experts I
3 The Social and Cultural Variability of Olfactory Perception
4 Sensory Ethnography: Smellwalks and Smellscapes
5 Smell Design
6 Conclusion
References
Smell and Knowledge: On the Pre-reflexive Order of Reality
1 Preliminary Remark: The Double Amnesia of Smelling
2 Social Symbolism
3 Political Dimensions
4 Disgusting Stench
5 Enchanting Fragrance
6 Final Remark: Smelling at the Neutrality Pole
References

The Problem of Perspectivity: Consequences of Spatial Sociological Considerations for the Reconstruction of Subjective Meaning
1 Perspective(s) as a Problem
1.1 Karl May and Dürerś Rhinoceros
1.2 Short Proposal of a Typology of Different Data Types
2 Here and Now: The Spatial Embodiment of Perspectivity
2.1 On the Problem of Experience Data
2.2 Space, Perception and Sense
2.3 The Perceiving Subject in Space: Methodological Implications
3 In Conclusion: The Sensual Understanding of Meaning
References
Part II: Practice, Movement, Coordination: Physical Positioning

Understanding Making Music Together: On the Sensuality of Making Music in String Ensembles
1 Research Design of the Project
2 Empirical Case Study: The Hearing Coordination Problem
3 Interpretation of the Case Study: The Semantics of ``Hearing ́́
4 The Sensuality of Music Making in String Ensembles
5 Reciprocity, Positionality, Perspectivity and Hearing in String Ensemble Playing
References
Balance as a Skaterś Duty? Sensual-Trained Action as an Expression of Scene Affiliation in Skateboarding
1 With Alfred Schütz on the Board
2 Skate Specific Action

3 Vestibular Sense: Key to Skating
4 Visual Sense: The Trained Eye
5 Tactile Sense: Knowledge of the Feet
6 Auditory Sense: The Trained Ear
7 Conclusion
References
Skating Amongst Shiny Cars: Polishing as a Sensual Care Practice
1 Introduction
2 Sensory Perception and Material Culture
3 Encounter with the Research Field
3.1 Wheels, Tyres and Shiny Cars
3.2 Polishing
4 Conclusion
References
``How It Should Look Like:́́ The Importance of the Perception of Others and Tacit Knowledge for Oneś Own Body Movement in Oly...

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