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Writing Embodiment in Victorian Microscopy: Beautiful Mechanism

English

By (author): Meegan Kennedy

Writing Embodiment in Victorian Microscopy examines a revolutionary period in microscopical technology and practice. At first considered a mere toy, by 1900 the microscope rivaled the railway and telegraph as an emblem of modernity and enjoyed an astonishing diversity of applications. This technology could drive scientific debates on subjects like cell theory, vitalism, and bacteriology; guide workers in classrooms, laboratories, and businesses; and inspire a personal hobby or a mass entertainment. Victorian microscopy productively cuts across the ostensibly separate domains of science, religion, commerce, art, education, entertainment, and domestic life. Writing Embodiment reads nineteenth-century microscopy across scientific, literary, religious, and popular texts. It argues that Victorian microscopists saw their vision and cognition as fully embodied experiences, the images emerging through a material entanglement of bodies (observer, instrument, apparatus, object) in a dynamic, unstable system. These ideas echo the work of physiological psychologists, who proposed mind as a system of embodied, distributed, and dynamic processes shaped by automatic or unconscious reflex action, attention, mental training, and fatigue. Striving to regulate this complex system, microscopists circulated tropes of embodiment through the varied forms of nineteenth-century print culture. They adapted existing concepts (such as beauty, the sublime, natural theology, and fairylands), or coined new phrases (such as many-sided comprehension), to promote favored forms of embodiment and enculturate microscopy as a difficult but valuable pursuit. Beautiful Mechanism draws on important work in book history and periodical studies by emphasizing the circulation of these tropes in intermedial conversations across diverse print forms. Victorians understood wonder and skepticism not as incommensurate approaches to scientific observation but rather as complementary forms of embodiment. Romantic tropes of wonder solicit affective flows from observer to wriggling animalcule and back; while skeptical, realist tropes offer to train the reader's eye, hand, body, and judgment and to formalize microscopical practice. Microscopical narratives may manipulate wonder and skepticism in productive tension or create virtual storyspaces that enlist the reader in virtual witnessing. These tropes shape every level of microscopical interest and proficiency. By analyzing their use and circulation, Writing Embodiment illuminates wider patterns of Victorian thought on embodiment, scientific practice, and community. See more
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A01=Meegan KennedyAge Group_UncategorizedAuthor_Meegan Kennedyautomatic-updateCategory1=Non-FictionCategory=DSBFCategory=JFCACategory=MBXCategory=PDXCOP=United KingdomDelivery_Pre-orderLanguage_EnglishPA=Not yet availablePrice_€100 and abovePS=Forthcomingsoftlaunch

Will deliver when available. Publication date 16 Jan 2025

Product Details
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jan 2025
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9780198939009

About Meegan Kennedy

Meegan Kennedy is an Associate Professor of English at Florida State University and a founding member of FSU's Health Humanities Initiative. She has taught at Harvard University and Trinity College (Connecticut). She studies the history and culture of Victorian medicine science and the novel with a particular interest in how we gather verify and share sense-based knowledge. Her work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Huntington Library among others. With Piers Hall she is a General Editor of the Routledge series and database Routledge Historical Resources: Nineteenth-Century Science Technology and Medicine.

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