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Cultural History of the Senses [Multiple-component retail product]

Edited by (McGill University, Canada)
  • Formatas: Multiple-component retail product, weight: 3242 g, 300 bw illus, Contains 6 paperbacks
  • Serija: The Cultural Histories Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Sep-2018
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350077836
  • ISBN-13: 9781350077836
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Multiple-component retail product, weight: 3242 g, 300 bw illus, Contains 6 paperbacks
  • Serija: The Cultural Histories Series
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Sep-2018
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350077836
  • ISBN-13: 9781350077836
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The definitive overview of the role of the senses from antiquity to the modern age, covering themes such as religion, philosophy, science, medicine, literature, art and media.

What did the past sound like, taste like, smell like? How did it look and feel? How did people make sense of the world through their senses? These are questions which are increasingly capturing the interest of historians. A Cultural History of the Senses delves into the sensory foundations of Western civilization, taking a comprehensive period-by-period approach, which provides a broad understanding of the life of the senses from antiquity to the modern day. The volumes treat such topics as the sensory markers of gender and class, the aesthetic dimensions of material culture, religious sensibilities, the medical uses of the senses and their representation in art and literature. These investigations bring out the sensations and values which defined experience in a particular era and shaped the world view of the time. With contributions from such prominent scholars as Peter Burke, Alain Corbin, Andrew Wallace-Hadrill and Chris Woolgar, A Cultural History of the Senses sets the stage for a vital new way of understanding the past.

A Cultural History of the Senses presents an authoritative survey from ancient times to the present. This set of six volumes explores the cultural life of the senses in the West over a span of 2500 years:

1. A Cultural History of the Senses in Antiquity, 500 BCE-500 CE edited by Jerry Toner (University of Cambridge, UK)
2. A Cultural History of the Senses in the Middle Ages, 500-1450 edited by Richard Newhauser (Arizone State University, USA)
3. A Cultural History of the Senses in the Renaissance, 1450-1650 edited by Herman Roodenburg (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
4. A Cultural History of the Senses in the Age of Enlightenment, 1650-1800 edited by Anne Vila (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
5. A Cultural History of the Senses in the Age of Empire, 1800-1920 edited by Constance Classen (McGill University, Canada)
6. A Cultural History of the Senses in the Modern Age, 1920-2000 edited by David Howes (Concordia University, Canada)

Each volume discusses the same themes in its chapters: The Social Life of the Senses; Urban Sensations; The Senses in the Marketplace; The Senses in Religion; The Senses in Philosophy and Science; Medicine and the Senses; The Senses in Literature; Art and the Senses; and Sensory Media. This structure means that readers can either have a broad overview of a period or follow a theme through history by reading the relevant chapter in each volume.

Superbly illustrated, the full six volume set combines to present the most authoritative and comprehensive survey available on the senses in history.

Recenzijos

Over the past couple of decades, sensory historians have been working to restore taste, touch, smell and hearing to our understanding of the past. Some of the dividends of this approach are on display in the six highly engaging and authoritative volumes that have been gathered together as A Cultural History of the Senses under the general editorship of historian Constance Classen [ ...] These impressive volumes enable us to venture beyond the credo that 'seeing is believing' and to better appreciate the original iteration of that phrase as it was used in the medieval period: 'Seeing is believing but feelings the truth.' For the same reason, A Cultural History of the Senses reminds us that histories of smell, sound, taste and touchas well as of sightare remarkably useful in helping us remember that the truth is more complex than it might first appear. -- Mark M. Smith * The Wall Street Journal * What exactly is the enterprise [ of this work]? Most obviously, it is to take historical inquiry into a new area. More ambitiously, it is to extend and perhaps even alter our understanding of areas we already think we know. Most excitingly, we can hope that it might extend our understanding of the relations more generally between biology, circumstance, sensation and expression. -- Geoffrey Hawthorn * Times Literary Supplement * An authoritative and, undoubtedly, the most comprehensive distillation of work in this field If you have not yet discovered this field, your journey starts here. * Cultural and Social History * This is an extraordinary and intriguing book series ... I dont think I have ever come across anything quite like it. * Reference Reviews *

Daugiau informacijos

The definitive overview of the role of the senses from antiquity to the modern age, covering themes such as religion, philosophy, science, medicine, literature, art and media.
List of Illustrations
vii
Series Preface xi
Editor's Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Sensing the Ancient Past 1(1)
Jerry Toner
1 The Social Life of the Senses: Feasts and Funerals
23(22)
David Potter
2 Urban Sensations: Opulence and Ordure
45(24)
Gregory S. Aldrete
3 The Senses in the Marketplace: The Luxury Market and Eastern Trade in Imperial Rome
69(22)
Andrew Wallace-Hadrill
4 The Senses in Religion: Piety, Critique, Competition
91(24)
Susan Ashbrook Harvey
5 The Senses in Philosophy and Science: Five Conceptions from Heraclitus to Plato
115(24)
Ashley Clements
6 Medicine and the Senses: Humors, Potions, and Spells Helen King and Jerry Toner
139(24)
7 The Senses in Literature: Falling in Love in an Ancient Greek Novel
163(20)
Silvia Montiglio
8 Art and the Senses: The Artistry of Bodies, Stages, and Cities in the Greco-Roman World
183(26)
Mark Bradley
9 Sensory Media: Representation, Communication, and Performance in Ancient Literature
209
Benjamin Eldon Stevens
Notes 227(8)
Bibliography 235(18)
Notes on Contributors 253(4)
Index 257
List of Illustrations
vii
Series Preface xi
Editor's Acknowledgments xii
Introduction: The Sensual Middle Ages 1(1)
Richard G. Newhauser
1 The Social Life of the Senses: Experiencing the Self, Others, and Environments
23(22)
Chris Woolgar
2 Urban Sensations: The Medieval City Imagined
45(22)
Kathryn Reyerson
3 The Senses in the Marketplace: Markets, Shops, and Shopping in Medieval Towns
67(22)
Martha Carlin
4 The Senses in Religion: Liturgy, Devotion, and Deprivation
89(22)
Beatrice Caseau
5 The Senses in Philosophy and Science: Mechanics of the Body or Activity of the Soul?
111(22)
Pekka Karkkainen
6 Medicine and the Senses: Feeling the Pulse, Smelling the Plague, and Listening for the Cure
133(20)
Faith Wallis
7 The Senses in Literature: The Textures of Perception Vincent Gillespie
153(22)
8 Art and the Senses: Art and Liturgy in the Middle Ages
175(20)
Eric Palazzo
9 Sensory Media: From Sounds to Silence, Sight to Insight
195
Hildegard Elisabeth Keller
Notes 217(2)
Bibliography 219(32)
Notes on Contributors 251(4)
Index 255
List of Illustrations
vii
Series Preface x
Editor's Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Entering the Sensory Worlds of the Renaissance 1(1)
Herman Roodenburg
1 The Social Life of the Senses: Architecture, Food, and Manners
19(24)
Niall Atkinson
2 Urban Sensations: Attractive and Repulsive
43(18)
Peter Burke
3 The Senses in the Marketplace: Sensory Knowledge in a Material World
61(26)
Evelyn Welch
4 The Senses in Religion: Towards the Reformation of the Senses
87(20)
Matthew Milner
5 The Senses in Philosophy and Science: From the Nobility of Sight to the Materialism of Touch
107(20)
Danijela Kambaskovic
Charles T. Wolfe
6 Medicine and the Senses: Physicians, Sensation, and the Soul
127(22)
Stephen Pender
7 The Senses in Literature: Renaissance Poetry and the Paradox of Perception
149(20)
Holly Dugan
8 Art and the Senses: Representation and Reception of Renaissance Sensations
169(34)
Francois Quiviger
9 Sensory Media: The Circular Links between Orality and Writing
203
Federico Barbierato
Notes 221(4)
Bibliography 225(36)
Notes on Contributors 261(4)
Index 265
List of Illustrations
vii
Series Preface xi
Editor's Acknowledgments xii
Introduction: Powers, Pleasures, and Perils of the Senses in the Enlightenment Era 1(1)
Anne C. Vila
1 The Social Life of the Senses: A New Approach to Eighteenth-century Politics and Public Life
21(20)
Sophia Rosenfeld
2 Urban Sensations: Motion and Commotion in Eighteenth-century Cities
41(24)
Clare Brant
3 The Senses in the Marketplace: Coffee, Chintz, and Sofas
65(20)
Joan Dejean
4 The Senses in Religion: Listening to God in the Eighteenth Century
85(24)
Phyllis Mack
5 The Senses in Philosophy and Science: Blindness and Insight
109(24)
Lissa Roberts
6 Medicine and the Senses: The Perception of Essences
133(22)
Patrick Singy
7 The Senses in Literature: Pleasures of Imagining in Poetry and Prose
155(24)
Rowan Rose Boyson
8 Art and the Senses: Experiencing the Arts in the Age of Sensibility
179(24)
Sarah Cohen
Downing A. Thomas
9 Sensory Media: Communication and the Enlightenment in the Atlantic World
203
Richard Cullen Rath
Notes 225(8)
Bibliography 233(32)
Notes on Contributors 265(3)
Index 268
List of Illustrations
vii
Series Preface x
Editor's Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: The Transformation of Perception 1(1)
Constance Classen
1 The Social Life of the Senses: The Assaults and Seductions of Modernity
25(22)
Kate Flint
2 Urban Sensations: The Shifting Sensescape of the City
47(22)
Alain Corbin
3 The Senses in the Marketplace: Stimulation and Distraction, Gratification and Control
69(20)
Erika D. Rappaport
4 The Senses in Religion: Migrations of Sacred and Sensory Values
89(24)
David Morgan
5 The Senses in Philosophy and Science: From the Senses to Sensations
113(24)
Robert Jutte
6 The Senses in Medicine: Seeing, Hearing and Smelling Disease
137(24)
David S. Barnes
7 The Senses in Literature: Industry and Empire
161(24)
Nicholas Daly
8 Art and the Senses: From the Romantics to the Futurists
185(26)
Constance Classen
9 Sensory Media: The World Without and the World Within
211
Alison Griffiths
Notes 235(4)
Bibliography 239(24)
Notes on Contributors 263(4)
Index 267
List of Illustrations
vii
Series Preface x
Editor's Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: "Make it New!"---Reforming the Sensory World 1(30)
David Howes
1 The Social Life of the Senses: Ordering and Disordering the Modern Sensorium
31(24)
Tim Edensor
2 Urban Sensations: A Retrospective of Multisensory Drift Alex Rhys-Taylor
55(22)
3 The Senses in the Marketplace: Commercial Aesthetics for a Suburban Age
77(24)
Adam Mack
4 The Senses in Religion: Pluralism, Technology, and Change
101(24)
Isaac A. Weiner
5 The Senses in Philosophy and Science: From Sensation to Computation
125(24)
Matthew Nudds
6 Medicine and the Senses: Bodies, Technologies, and the Empowerment of the Patient
149(24)
Anamaria Iosif Ross
7 The Senses in Literature: From the Modernist Shock of Sensation to Postcolonial and Virtual Voices
173(22)
Ralf Hertel
8 Art and the Senses: The Avant-Garde Challenge to the Visual Arts
195(24)
Hannah B. Higgins
9 Sensory Media: Virtual Worlds and the Training of Perception
219(24)
Michael Bull
Notes 243(2)
Bibliography 245(24)
Notes on Contributors 269(3)
Index 272
Constance Classen is Visiting Scholar at McGill University, Canada and director of an interdisciplinary project on art, museums and the senses. She is the editor of The Book of Touch (2005), and the author of, among other works, Worlds of Sense: Exploring the Senses in History and Across Cultures (1993), The Color of Angels: Cosmology, Gender and the Aesthetic Imagination (1998) and The Deepest Sense: A Cultural History of Touch (2012).