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'Smell and Social Life' Now Available

Date

Monday 13 December 2021

Smell and social life.jpg

Literary references to smell in social contexts have a long tradition. However, the significant contribution of odour imagery to our moods and emotions goes largely unnoticed, which accounts for the comparatively late attention paid to smell in research into the significance of sensory images in literature. The well-known capacity of smell motifs to affirm and disrupt social and aesthetic norms cuts across historical periods, but the ways in which specific literary-historical periods renew motifs of smell in social life have remained underexplored.

Smell and Social Life: Aspects of English, French and German Literature (1880-1939), based on the interdisciplinary conference that took place in November 2018 at the University of London’s Institute of Modern Languages Research, gives an overview of such innovations in English, French and German literature during the timespan between the ‘olfactory explosion’ in 1880 and the break-up of modern movements in 1939.

Contributors: Sophie-Valentine Borloz; Jon Day; Michel Delville; Tag Gronberg; Katharina Herold; Andreas Kramer; Frank Krause; Catherine Maxwell; Sergej Rickenbacher; Susanne Schmid; Barry C. Smith; Maria Weilandt; Érika Wicky.

Smell and Social Life: Aspects of English, French and German Literature (1880-1939), edited by Katharina Herold and Frank Krause, is a  joint publication from iudicium verlag, Munich and the Institute of Modern Languages Research, University of London.

278 pp | 5 colour illustrations | London German Studies XVII | Munich: iudicium: ISBN 978-3-86205-629-3 | London: IMLR: ISBN 978-0-85457-280-9

Further information: https://modernlanguages.sas.ac.uk/publications/series/institute-germanic-studies-publications

This page was last updated on 18 August 2022