Eighteenth-Century Sensibility and the Novel: The Senses in Social Context

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Cambridge University Press, 20 de mai. de 2004 - 143 páginas
This study of sensibility in the eighteenth-century English novel discusses literary representations of suffering and responses to it in the social and scientific context of the period. The reader of novels shares with more scientific observers the activity of gazing on suffering, leading Ann Van Sant to explore the coincidence between the rhetoric of pathos and scientific presentation as they were applied to repentant prostitutes and children of the vagrant and criminal poor. The book goes on to explore the novel's location of psychological responses to suffering in physical forms. Van Sant invokes eighteenth-century debates about the relative status of sight and touch in epistemology and psychology, as a context for discussing the 'man of feeling' (notably in Sterne's A Sentimental Journey) - a spectator who registers his sensibility by physical means.

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Introduction
1
Sympathetic visibility philanthropic objects as instruments of pathos and demonstration
16
Gazing on suffering the provocation of response
45
Revelation of the heart through entrapment and trial Clarissas story Lovelaces plot
60
The centrality of touch
83
Locating experience in the body the man of feeling
98
Reading to the moment a note on sensibility and narrative form
116
Bibliography
126
Index
137
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