Empires of the Senses: Bodily Encounters in Imperial India and the Philippines
Autor Andrew J. Rotteren Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 aug 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190924706
ISBN-10: 0190924705
Pagini: 388
Ilustrații: 42 halftones
Dimensiuni: 239 x 157 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190924705
Pagini: 388
Ilustrații: 42 halftones
Dimensiuni: 239 x 157 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Empires of the Senses is principally a work of synthesis and elaboration, brilliantly building on and extending these scattered earlier studies of the senses and sensibilities of empire.
Empires of the Senses is a sharp, methodologically interesting, and generative work....Reading Rotter's sensory history is like watching a familiar film in 3D for the first time. The details pop out and writhe expressively. Through judicious quotation, Rotter brings to life the colonizers' experiences, offering a chapter each on the five senses plus thematic chapters on civilization, war, and decolonization. This is a richly detailed, fluidly written book.
This book stinks! Full of aromas and flavors, textures and tones, Empires of the Senses offers a beautifully written model for new ways of thinking critically about colonialism, power, and everyday life. A remarkable achievement by one of our most creative and provocative historians at the top of his game.
Andrew Rotter's Empires of the Senses is a tour de force not only for the history of imperialism and empire but also for sensory history generally. Rotter is the first historian of empire to apply the insights of sensory history, and he has produced a seminal book.
In this innovative contribution to comparative colonial history Andy Rotter opens up empire to the history of the senses. One of the joys of the book is that he is alive to the tragi-comic nature of the imperialist attempt to 'civilize' the vibrant sensory world of India and the Philippines. Empires of the Senses convincingly makes the case that the senses were central to the project of building and resisting an empire and will become essential reading for anyone seeking to deepen their understanding of the colonial experience.
Empires of the Senses is a sharp, methodologically interesting, and generative work....Reading Rotter's sensory history is like watching a familiar film in 3D for the first time. The details pop out and writhe expressively. Through judicious quotation, Rotter brings to life the colonizers' experiences, offering a chapter each on the five senses plus thematic chapters on civilization, war, and decolonization. This is a richly detailed, fluidly written book.
This book stinks! Full of aromas and flavors, textures and tones, Empires of the Senses offers a beautifully written model for new ways of thinking critically about colonialism, power, and everyday life. A remarkable achievement by one of our most creative and provocative historians at the top of his game.
Andrew Rotter's Empires of the Senses is a tour de force not only for the history of imperialism and empire but also for sensory history generally. Rotter is the first historian of empire to apply the insights of sensory history, and he has produced a seminal book.
In this innovative contribution to comparative colonial history Andy Rotter opens up empire to the history of the senses. One of the joys of the book is that he is alive to the tragi-comic nature of the imperialist attempt to 'civilize' the vibrant sensory world of India and the Philippines. Empires of the Senses convincingly makes the case that the senses were central to the project of building and resisting an empire and will become essential reading for anyone seeking to deepen their understanding of the colonial experience.
Notă biografică
Andrew J. Rotter is Charles A. Dana Professor of History at Colgate University. A past president of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, he is the author of Hiroshima: The World's Bomb (OUP, 2008), Comrades at Odds: Culture and Indo-U.S. Relations, 1947-1964, and The Path to Vietnam.