Curiosity: A Cultural History of Early Modern Inquiry

الغلاف الأمامي
University of Chicago Press, 15‏/03‏/2001 - 321 من الصفحات
What kind of person is curious? What makes a person or thing an object of curiosity? From Gulliver to Frankenstein, from detectives to hot air balloonists, curious and inquiring characters have been portrayed as themselves curiosities, as social upstarts, and as spectacles to behold. With "Curiosity," Barbara Benedict offers a new cultural history of curiosity as it shaped English writing from the late seventeenth to early nineteenth centuries.
Drawing on novels both popular and obscure, ghost stories, travel narratives, trial transcripts, journalism, poems, and pornography, Benedict argues that writers of this period depicted curiosity as an unsavory form of cultural ambition.""Curiosity, we learn, was persistently seen as a kind of transgression that allowed curious people scientists, collectors, and pryers of all sorts to escape their natural places and usurp institutions, meanings, and bodies for private use.
Finely illustrated and the first of its kind, "Curiosity" is a broad study of modern inquiry that explores the way forbidden topics like the occult, sexuality, gender, and the origin of power became topics of public investigation."

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نبذة عن المؤلف (2001)

Barbara M. Benedict is a professor and chair of English at Trinity College, Connecticut. She is the author of "Making the Modern Reader" and "Framing Feeling."

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