Taste Taste

Taste

A Literary History

    • $30.99
    • $30.99

Publisher Description

What does eating have to do with aesthetic taste? While most accounts of aesthetic history avoid the gustatory aspects of taste, this book rewrites standard history to uncover the constitutive and dramatic tension between appetite and aesthetics at the heart of British literary tradition. From Milton through the Romantics, the metaphor of taste serves to mediate aesthetic judgment and consumerism, gusto and snobbery, gastronomes and gluttons, vampires and vegetarians, as well as the philosophy and physiology of food.

The author advances a theory of taste based on Milton’s model of the human as consumer (and digester) of food, words, and other commodities—a consumer whose tasteful, subliminal self remains haunted by its own corporeality. Radically rereading Wordsworth’s feeding mind, Lamb’s gastronomical essays, Byron’s cannibals and other deviant diners, and Kantian nausea, Taste resituates Romanticism as a period that naturally saw the rise of the restaurant and the pleasures of the table as a cultural field for the practice of aesthetics.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2008
October 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
Yale University Press
SELLER
Yale University
SIZE
31.2
MB
Aguecheek's Beef, Belch's Hiccup, and Other Gastronomic Interjections Aguecheek's Beef, Belch's Hiccup, and Other Gastronomic Interjections
2008
Eating and Ethics in Shakespeare's England Eating and Ethics in Shakespeare's England
2013
Political Appetites Political Appetites
2017
Food, Poetry, and the Aesthetics of Consumption Food, Poetry, and the Aesthetics of Consumption
2012
Metaphors of Mind Metaphors of Mind
2015
The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food
2020
Book Madness Book Madness
2022
The Cambridge History of the British Essay The Cambridge History of the British Essay
2024
Gusto Gusto
2013