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- Wiley
More About This Title Tattoos - Philosophy for Everyone: I Ink, Therefore I Am
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- Contains chapters written by philosophers (most all with tattoos themselves), tattoo artists, and tattoo enthusiasts that touch upon many areas in Western and Eastern philosophy
- Enlightens people to the nature of tattoos and the tattooing arts, leading readers to think deeply about tattoos in new ways
- Offers thoughtful and humorous insights that make philosophical ideas accessible to the non-philosopher
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Robert Arp is a philosopher and ontologist who has taught at numerous colleges and universities. He is the author of Scenario Visualization: An Evolutionary Account of Creative Problem Solving (2008) and a co-author of Critical Thinking: An Introduction to Reasoning Well (2011), What’s Good on TV: Understanding Ethics through Television (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011), and Philosophy DeMYSTiFieD (2011); in addition, he is editor of South Park and Philosophy: You Know, I Learned Something Today (Wiley-Blackwell, 2006).
Series Editor
Fritz Allhoff is an associate professor in the philosophy department at Western Michigan University, as well as a senior research fellow at the Australian National University’s Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics. In addition to editing the Philosophy for Everyone series, he is also the volume editor or co-editor for several titles, including Wine and Philosophy (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007), Whiskey and Philosophy (with Marcus P. Adams, Wiley, 2009), and Food and Philosophy (with Dave Monroe, Wiley-Blackwell, 2007). His academic research interests engage various facets of applied ethics, ethical theory, and the history and philosophy of science.
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Rocky Rakovic
I Am, Therefore I Ink: An Introduction to Tattoos – Philosophy for Everyone: I Ink, Therefore I Am xiv
Robert Arp
Acknowledgments xxvii
SHEET I THE HISTORY AND NATURE OF TATTOOS 1
1 Tattoos and the Tattooing Arts in Perspective: An Overview and Some Preliminary Observations 3
Charles Taliaferro and Mark Odden
2 How to Read a Tattoo, and Other Perilous Quests 14
Juniper Ellis
SHEET II TATTOOS AND ART 27
3 Are Tattoos Art? 29
Nicolas Michaud
4 Fleshy Canvas: The Aesthetics of Tattoos from Feminist and Hermeneutical Perspectives 38
Kimberly Baltzer-Jaray and Tanya Rodriguez
SHEET III THE TATTOOED WOMAN 51
5 Female Tattoos and Graffiti 53
Thorsten Botz-Bornstein
6 Painted Fetters: Tattooing as Feminist Liberation 65
Nancy Kang
SHEET IV PERSONAL IDENTITY 81
7 Tattoo You: Personal Identity in Ink 83
Kyle Fruh and Emily Thomas
8 Illusions of Permanence: Tattoos and the Temporary Self 96
Rachel C. Falkenstern
9 My Tattoo May Be Permanent, But My Memory of It Isn't 109
Clancy Smith
SHEET V EXPRESSIONS OF FREEDOM 121
10 Tattoos are Forever: Bodily Freedom and the (Im)possibility of Change 123
Felipe Carvalho
11 Bearing the Marks: How Tattoos Reveal Our Embodied Freedom 135
Jonathan Heaps
SHEET VI EXPERIENCES AND STORIES SURROUNDING TATTOOS 149
12 Never Merely 'There': Tattooing as a Practice of Writing and a Telling of Stories 151
Wendy Lynne Lee
13 Something Terribly Flawed: Philosophy and ‘The Illustrated Man' 165
Kevin S. Decker
SHEET VII ETHICAL CONCERNS 179
14 The Vice of the Tough Tattoo 181
Jennifer Baker
15 To Ink, or Not To Ink: Tattoos and Bioethics 193
Daniel Miori
16 Writing on the Body: The Modern Morality of the Tattoo 206
Simon Woods
SHEET VIII EASTERN AND RELIGIOUS PERSPECTIVES 219
17 Is a Tattoo a Sign of Impiety? 221
Adam Barkman
18 Confessions of a Tattooed Buddhist Philosopher 230
Joseph J. Lynch
19 An Atheist and a Theist Discuss a Cross Tattoo and God's Existence 242
Robert Arp
Notes on Contributors 261
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Review from The Scotman 8 June 2012
It's about time tattoos got a philosophical treatment like this!Michelle "Bombshell" McGee