においの近代初期文化史(英訳)<br>Smells : A Cultural History of Odours in Early Modern Times

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においの近代初期文化史(英訳)
Smells : A Cultural History of Odours in Early Modern Times

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 260 p.
  • 商品コード 9781509536771

Full Description

Why is our sense of smell so under-appreciated?  We tend to think of smell as a vestigial remnant of our pre-human past, doomed to gradual extinction, and we go to great lengths to eliminate smells from our environment, suppressing body odour, bad breath and other smells.  Living in a relatively odour-free environment has numbed us to the importance that smells have always had in human history and culture.

In this major new book Robert Muchembled restores smell to its rightful place as one of our most important senses and examines the transformation of smells in the West from the Renaissance to the beginning of the 19th century.  He shows that in earlier centuries, the air in towns and cities was often saturated with nauseating emissions and dangerous pollution.  Having little choice but to see and smell faeces and urine on a daily basis, people showed little revulsion; until the 1620s, literature and poetry delighted in excreta which now disgust us. The smell of excrement and body odours were formative aspects of eroticism and sexuality, for the social elite and the popular classes alike.  At the same time, medicine explained outbreaks of plague by Satan's poisonous breath corrupting the air.  Amber, musk and civet came to be seen as vital bulwarks against the devil's breath: scents were worn like armour against the plague.  The disappearance of the plague after 1720 and the sharp decline in fear of the devil meant there was no longer any point in using perfumes to fight the forces of evil, paving the way for the olfactory revolution of the 18th century when softer, sweeter perfumes, often with floral and fruity scents, came into fashion, reflecting new norms of femininity and a gentler vision of nature.  

This rich cultural history of an under-appreciated sense will be appeal to a wide readership.

Contents

Table of Contents


Table of illustrations

Introduction

Chapter one: Our unique sense of smell

Is science always objective?    

A sense of danger, emotions, and delight
    
Chapter 2: A Pervasive stench   

The foul air of medieval towns  

Urban cess pits

The smell of profit  

Pollutant trades

Countryside smells   

Chapter three: Joyous matter
    
A scholarly culture of scatology

Aromatic blasons

Humour in the conte  

The Way to Succeed   

Odorous wind   

Chapter four: Scent of a woman
   
Demonising the smell of women   

When ladies did not smell of roses   

At arm's length

Guilty women   

A breath of eroticism
 
The gutter press

A literary stink

Death and the old woman

Demonic pleasure

Chapter five: The Devil's breath
 
Venomous vapours

Plague-ridden towns  

Perfume as armour    

Perfumed rituals

Rue, vinegar and tobacco
    
Pomanders 

Chapter six: Musky scents
   
Fountains of youth   

Ambergris, musk and civet
   
The perfumed glove trade  

The eroticism of leather  

Nothing new under the Sun King?
  
Drawing death's sting

The great animal slaughter
  
Chapter seven: Civilising floral essences
   
The perfume revolution    

Luxuriating in baths of scent   

Sensual faces  

Bodily hair care

The scent of powder  

The emperor's perfumer    

Conclusion

Bibliography

     A note on quotations

     Principle manuscript sources

     Primary sources

     Selected bibliography

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