Embodied: Victorian Literature and the Senses
By (Author) William A. Cohen
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
24th January 2009
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
820.9
Paperback
216
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 13mm
What does it mean to be human British writers in the Victorian period found a surprising answer to this question. What is human, they discovered, is nothing more or less than the human body itself. In literature of the period, as well as in scientific writing and journalism, the notion of an interior human essence came to be identified with the material existence of the body. The organs of sensory perception were understood as crucial routes of exchange between the interior and the external worlds. Anatomizing Victorian ideas of the human, William A. Cohen considers the meaning of sensory encounters in works by writers including Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bront, Anthony Trollope, Thomas Hardy, and Gerard Manley Hopkins.
"Remarkable, rare, and full of elegant, ineluctable insights, Embodied is unfailingly smart. Readers across many disciplines will grasp how the Victorians advanced ahead of postmodern dicta as they forged materialist thought, even when they talked in terms of mind and soul. An exquisite study." Kathryn Bond Stockton, University of Utah
"Victorian literature has seldom been more unsettlingly physical than it is in William Cohens hands. A tour de force of cultural phenomenology, Cohens Embodied shakes up our sense of the Victorians and so refreshes our senses themselves." Joseph Litvak, Tufts University