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2 - The “sense of history” and the history of the senses: periodizing perception in Wordsworth and Blake

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Noel Jackson
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Summary

No doubt, on the level of appearances, modernity begins when the human being begins to exist within his organism, inside the shell of his head … and in the whole structure of his physiology.

Michel Foucault, The Order of Things

States that are not, but ah! Seem to be

William Blake, Milton

Few genres of historical research have been quite so productive these days as that genre known as affective history, and the sub-genre that often goes by the name of the history of the senses. The remarks of a historian who has accomplished more than many in this territory, Alain Corbin, offer a typical assessment of the genre at the present time. Readers of Corbin's work, particularly his history of smell in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century France, could not have been surprised when the historian dedicated himself to a prolegomena towards – as his title indicates – “a history and anthropology of the senses.” What is surprising from a historian whose work has made significant inroads into the practical realization of such a project is the ambivalence that Corbin bears towards it.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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