About Face

About Face

by Jonathan Cole
About Face

About Face

by Jonathan Cole

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

What is special about the face, and what happens when neurological conditions make expression or comprehension of the face unavailable? Through a mix of science, autobiography, case studies, and speculation, Jonathan Cole shows the importance not only of facial expressions for communication among individuals but also of facial embodiment for our sense of self. He presents, in his words, "a natural history of the face and an unnatural history of those who live without it."

The heart of the book lies in the experiences of people with facial losses of various kinds. The case studies are of blind, autistic, and neurologically impaired persons; the most extreme case involves Mobius syndrome, in which individuals are born with a total inability to move their facial muscles and hence to make facial expressions. Cole suggests that it is only by studying such personal narratives of loss that we can understand facial function and something of what all our faces reflect.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262531634
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 02/18/1999
Series: MIT Press Series
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 237
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Jonathan Cole, D.M., F.R.C.P., is Consultant in Clinical Neurophysiology, Poole Hospital, and at Salisbury Hospital (with its Spinal Centre), a Professor at Bournemouth University and a visiting Senior Lecturer, Southampton University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
1 The Pre-face: "Tell, Please"
Mary
Opening the Seam
"Tell, Please"
Looking through the Window
2 Residing in Voices
"Not Like a Hand"
A Politician Who Finds It Difficult to Smile
3 We Do Not Share the Same World
Floods of Faces
Sweating Blood
4 Bone to Brain
Fish Face
Darwin's Nose
The Anatomy of a Smile
The Vanity of Astronauts
Bell's Nerve
Laughter and Sorrow
Cars and Faces
5 Chimpanzees' Dreams
From Aristotle to Darwin
Universal Faces
Culture and Colors
Smiling Happy People?
Decoding Primate Faces
Howlett's Zoo, Kent
Monkey World, Dorset
The Tavistock Institute, London
6 Born Independent
Theory of Mind
Feelings of Soul
The Color of Hair
7 Like a Ball Off a Wall
8 The Spectator
Imitation, Self, and Others
Child's Play
In the Playground
The Reflection of Ourselves
James
9 One Big Family
George
10 Dull and Boring?
Oliver
Mrs. Doubtfire
Coming Alive--The Video
Grumpy
11 Changing Faces
Seven Years of Trial and Error
Seeing the Enemy
12 Face Odyssey
Maps of Feelings
Hearing Emotions, Thinking Emotions
Controlling Emotions
Measuring Skulls
No Different Today
William James and James
Phantom Emotions
Face Value
Theory of Mind?
Seeing Consciousness
The Divine Fantasy
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

John Campbell

By providing case studies of people who for one reason or another have problems with facial expression, About Face raises a flood of questions about the role of face in our knowledge of other minds. It is suggestive and stimulating about fresh lines of inquiry for anyone interested in, broadly, 'the problem of other minds'. It is not just reading for specialists, though. The book is light and easy to read. And you would have to be inhuman not to be moved by some of the stories it tells.

Oliver Sacks

What is a face? Why do we have faces? What is it to 'face' another person? Or, literally, to lose face, to be faceless, or de-faced? As a physician and neurologist, Jonathan Cole considers every aspect of the human face—its evolution; its exquisite delicacy of musculature and neural control; its capacity to transmit every feeling, intention, mood, state of mind; its crucial role in making contact, establishing identity and relationships; and the dire effects if any of these are defective or break down. About Face is a remarkable book, the first comprehensive exploration of the face, and a fascinating one, which combines the clinical and the human, the biological and the cultural, in an altogether original way.

Simon Baron-Cohen

Jonathan Cole attacks the problem about what is special about the face, and what happensin different neurological conditions when expression or comprehension of the face is unavailable. He conveys something about the first hand experience of what it is like to have autism, visual impairment, or Moebius syndrome, for example, through excerpts or interviews with sufferers. This is a fascinating book, which I think will grab the reader via its unusual style.

Nancy Etcoff

This is a highly readable, useful, and interesting book filled with many thought-provoking discussions and ideas. It could become a classic reference text for those of us interested in the face and facial expression as researchers, psychiatrists, neurologists, or simply as human beings.

Antonio R. Damasio

A thoughtful and rich book about the human face, written from an unusual perspective.

From the Publisher

" About Face ... is, I believe, a truly important book, which could do much to counteract the extremes of sociobiological reductionism." John Cornwell Sunday Times (UK)

The MIT Press

Endorsement

A thoughtful and rich book about the human face, written from an unusual perspective.

-- Antonio R. Damasio, author of Descartes' Error; M.W. Van Allen Professor and Head, Department of Neurology, University of Iowa College of Medicine

Nigel Leigh

This is a fascinating work, on a topic to which anyone interested in human behaviour will relate. Dr. Cole has assembled an extraordinary array of stories illustrating literally how we face the world. This is both a very erudite work, and an immensely readable and enjoyable one. It will certainly give neurologists cause to reflect on much that they see, but the topic goes far beyond any interest in neurology and psychology, and reaches into some of the deepest and most perplexing problems of human communication. The magic of this book is that it does so with an extraordinarily light and entertaining touch. It should become a classic at the very 'interace' between real human experiences and the theoretical and emotional responses we construct to give them some sort of order.

Shaun Gallagher

Cole has a remarkable ability to be objective and scholarly and at the same time personal and caring with regard to the subjects who reveal themselves in this book. About Face is also exceptional in the fact that it is at once focused and comprehensive — it provides a well-defined portrait of the face, yet the scope of Cole's examination extends from evolutionary issues, to neonate behavior, to extraordinary pathologies, and to the dynamics of social communication, as well as to philosophical and ethical concerns. Despite the breadth, Cole manages to dig deeply, to explore important implications, and to raise profound questions.

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