Synopses & Reviews
This path-breaking book examines our attitudes to the senses from antiquity through to the present day. Robert Jutte explores a wealth of different traditions, images, metaphors and ideas that have survived through time and describes how sensual impressions change the way in which we experience the world.
Throughout history, societies have been both intrigued or unsettled by the five senses. The author looks at the way in which the social world conditions our perception and traces the 'rediscovery' of sensual pleasure in the twentieth century, paying attention to experiences as varied as fast food, deoderization, and extra-sensory perception. He concludes by exploring technological change and cyberspace, reflecting on how developments in these fields will affect our relationship with the senses in the future.
Review
'Jutte’s ambitious yet accessible book offers a lucid and judicious summary of research in this new and expanding field, as well as making a contribution of its own, distinguishing three periods in the history of the senses and offering intelligent speculations about future developments.'
Peter Burke, Professor of Cultural History, University of Cambridge'Stimulating and impressive... In this pioneering study Jutte unfolds a panorama of how societies have been fascinated or unsettled by any of the five senses, and invites the reader to respond with curiosity, humour and profound interest to follow through his discussion from antiquity to visions of the future.' Dr Ulinka Rublack, University of Cambridge
Synopsis
This book charts the development of our attitudes and relationships to our senses from antiquity to the twentieth century.
Synopsis
Robert Juette's introduction explores the recent revival in the popularity of the senses, rather unsurprisingly featuring prominently in marketing campaigns, on TV and the Internet, but also in museum exhibitions. This history of ideas, attitudes, traditions and metaphors of the senses begins in ancient Indian and Chinese medicine and natural philosophy, before exploring Greek and Roman concepts of the senses and the influence this had on medieval natural philosopohy. In one hundred pages we arrive at the 18th century and the rest of the book focuses on the early modern and modern eras, assessing the sensual and virtual world in which we live in today,
About the Author
Robert Jutte is Head of the Robert Bosch Foundation Institute of Medicine and Professor of Modern History at Stuttgart University
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations.
Tuning Up Conspicuous Manifestations - (Un-)Timely Reflections.
Part I Senses and Historicity.
1. Approaching the Superhistorical.
Part II The Traditional Order of the Sense: From Antiquity to the Early Modern Era.
2.Conceptions: The Sensorium.
3.Classifications: The Hierarchy of the Senses.
4. Representations: Allegories.
5. Practices: The Senses and their Ailments.
Part III From the World of the Senses to the World of Reason.
(Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries).
6. Philosophical Sensualism in the Age of Sensibility.
7.The Senses and Aesthetics.
8. The Education of the Senses.
9. The Transformation of the Senses by Industrialization and Technology.
10. Experimental Physiology and the Separation of the Senses.
Part IV The 'Rediscovery' of the Senses in the Twentieth Century.
11. Touching - or The New Pleasure in the Body.
12. Tasting - or What do Fast Food and Nouvelle Cuisine Share in Common?.
13. Scenting - or From Deodorization to Reodorization.
14. Listening Effects - or The Art and Power of Noise.
15. Ways of Seeing -or The Human Rights of the Eye.
16. Psi-Phenomena - or The Exploration of Extra-Sensory Perception.
Outlook.
17. Cyberspace and the Future of the Senses.
Notes.
Index