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Title Empire of the senses : sensory practices of colonialism in early America / edited by Daniela Hacke, Paul Musselwhite
Published Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2018]

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Description 1 online resource (ix, 334 pages)
Series Early American History Series: The American Colonies, 1500-1830 ; Volume 8
Early American history series ; v. 8.
Contents Introduction: making sense of colonial encounters and new worlds / Daniela Hacke and Paul Musselwhite -- Part I. Cultural encounters -- Touching on communication: visual and textual representations of touch as friendship in early colonial encounters / Celine Carayon -- Mission soundscapes: demons, Jesuits, and sounds in Antonio Ruiz de Montoya's Conquista espiritual (1639) / Jutta Toelle -- Singing with strangers in early seventeenth-century New France / Michaela Ann Cameron -- Part II. Colonial subjectivity -- The pain of senses escaping: eighteenth-century Europeans and the sensory challenges of the Caribbean / Annika Raapke -- Color visions: perceiving nature in the Portuguese Atlantic world / Marilia dos Santos Lopes -- Part III. Structures of knowledge -- Colonial sensescapes: Thomas Harriot and the production of knowledge / Daniela Hacke -- Merian and the pineapple: visual representation of the senses / Megan Baumhammer and Claire Kennedy -- "Delightful a fragrance": native American olfactory aesthetics within the eighteenth-century Anglo-American botanical community / Andrew Kettler -- Part IV. Colonial projects -- The aromas of flora's wide domains: cultivating gardens, aromas, and political subjects in the late seventeenth-century English Atlantic / Kate Mulry -- Exploring underwater worlds: diving in the late seventeenth-early eighteenth-century British empire / Rebekka von Mallinckrodt
Summary Empire of the Senses brings together pathbreaking scholarship on the role the five senses played in early America. With perspectives from across the hemisphere, exploring individual senses and multi-sensory frameworks, the volume explores how sensory perception helped frame cultural encounters, colonial knowledge, and political relationships. From early French interpretations of intercultural touch, to English plans to restructure the scent of Jamaica, these essays elucidate different ways the expansion of rival European empires across the Americas involved a vast interconnected range of sensory experiences and practices. Empire of the Senses offers a new comparative perspective on the way European imperialism was constructed, operated, implemented and, sometimes, counteracted by rich and complex new sensory frameworks in the diverse contexts of early America. This book has been listed on the Books of Note section on the website of Sensory Studies, which is dedicated to highlighting the top books in sensory studies: www.sensorystudies.org/books-of-note
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on December 01, 2017)
Subject Senses and sensation -- Social aspects -- America -- History
HISTORY -- Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies)
HISTORY -- North America.
Manners and customs
Senses and sensation -- Social aspects
SUBJECT America -- Social life and customs
Europe -- Colonies -- America -- History
Europe -- Colonies -- History
Subject America
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Hacke, Daniela, editor, contributor
Musselwhite, Paul, editor, contributor
LC no. 2017049623
ISBN 9789004340640
9004340645