David Howes is Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Centre for Sensory Studies at Concordia University and Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Law at McGill University. His most recent publications include A Cultural History of the Senses in the Modern Age, 1920–2000 and The Sensory Studies Manifesto.
“When we play Howes’ sensory games, everyone wins. . . . We need
[his] sensory studies if we are to have our willow bark and eat our
aspirin too.”—Brian Glenney Social History of Medicine
“David Howes is a leading figure in sensory studies. In this
masterful work, he addresses an extraordinary array of topics and
theories in uncovering the history of the legal, anthropological,
and psychological dimensions of the senses. In showing how the
senses are made, not given, Howes offers an expansive analysis that
both links and extends each of these disciplines in unexpected
ways.”—Deborah Lupton, SHARP Professor, Faculty of Arts, Design &
Architecture, University of New South Wales Sydney
“This engaging and erudite book reminds us that the academy
suffers, to a greater or lesser extent, from sensory deprivation.
For David Howes, history and anthropology invite a crossing of
cultures and disciplines through the senses. For the law, Howes
advocates a ‘cross-cultural jurisprudence’ in which song, dance,
and smell coexist with the written word. Sensorial Investigations
celebrates ‘con-sensus’ rather than ways of knowing tied
exclusively, and senselessly, to words on a page.”—Nicholas
Kasirer, Justice, Supreme Court of Canada
“In Sensorial Investigations, David Howes shows how an anthropology
of the senses deepens and expands our understanding of human
history and potential. Meticulously exploring varieties of sensory
experience, and challenging the universalizing reductions of social
science, this book helps us learn more from difference. The
investigations described and prescribed open an exciting vista for
a sensorial mode of attention in the human sciences.”—Judith
Farquhar, Professor Emeritus, Department of Anthropology, The
University of Chicago
“Sensorial Investigations is a timely, exciting, and vitally
important contribution to the interdisciplinary field of sensory
studies, especially sensory anthropology and sensory history.
Erudite and wide-ranging in scholarship, it is inventive in its
argument and written in lively, engrossing prose by a leading light
in the field.”—Peter Denney, author of The Senses in World
History
“‘Neuroscientists need to get out of their own heads,’ David Howes
says in introducing his rich and thought-provoking exploration of
the sensorium. His bold project of crossing disciplines, cultures,
and historical periods delivers a vision of the senses that takes
us far beyond the narrow explorations of philosophy and the
sciences.”—Raymond Tallis, author of Seeing Ourselves: Reclaiming
Humanity from God and Science
“Sublime and magisterial, Sensorial Investigations is a critical
assemblage and rereading of Wittgenstein, Arendt, Simmel, and many
others. At once provocative, accessible, and poignant, Howes
deftly charts the intellectual trajectory of the senses anew and
pronounces nuanced and interdisciplinary approaches that both make
and unmake the senses. A must-read for researchers and students of
sensory inquiry.”—Kelvin E. Y. Low, Professor, Department of
Sociology and Anthropology, National University of Singapore
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