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Abstract

W pracy opisano skomplikowaną i bujną historię budynku dawnego dworu Gorajskich przy ul. Bernardyńskiej 12 w Lublinie. Uwzględniono powszechnie znane fakty i dokumenty historyczne z życia budynku jak i te dopiero poznane. Przy uwzględnieniu istniejących prac badawczych i projektów oraz oględzin i badań własnych udało się wykonać analizę architektoniczną, z wykonaniem rozwarstwienia i określenia faz przekształceń budynku. Praca ta pozwoliła na umieszczenie dworu Gorajskich jako jednego z zapomnianych ale ciągle zachowanych dworów magnackich powstałych w XVII wieku na lubelskim Żmigrodzie.
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Authors and Affiliations

Krzysztof Janus
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Abstract

Since the so‑called “bodily turn” in the humanities, it may pass as trivial that, as observed by Alva Noë, “experience is not a passive interior state, but a mode of active engagement with the world”. Nevertheless, it seems worth repeating especially that the most direct implication of this thought – that when humans actively engage with the world they do so by moving their physical bodies around – has apparently penetrated much less. This is especially true in the case of academic disciplines involved in the study of the past – history and archaeology – which seem unprepared to investigate past embodiment in a comprehensive manner.
Hence, a new methodological proposition is put forth – archaeology of motion. It is inspired by anthropologists and ethnographers’ successful adaptation of participatory observation and auto-‑ethnography to the study of embodied practices. It makes use of embodied research advocated by Ben Spatz as well as insights from ecological psychology of James J. Gibson and its various off‑shoots in order to propose a positive research programme for studies in past bodily motion. The paper is capstoned with a short account of a case study on a forgotten Polish folk wrestling style where the proposed theory was put into practice.
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Authors and Affiliations

Maciej Talaga
1
ORCID: ORCID
Jakub Wrzalik
2
Krzysztof Janus
2

  1. Faculty “Artes Liberales”, University of Warsaw
  2. Warsaw Study Group, Association for Renaissance Martial Arts ARMA‑PL

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