Drawing on the generous semantic range the term enjoyed in early modern usage, Experimental Selves argues that 'person,' as early moderns understood this concept, was an 'experimental' phenomenon-at once a given of experience and the self-conscious arena of that experience. Person so conceived was discovered to be a four-dimensional creature: a composite of mind or 'inner' personality; of the body and outward appearance; of social relationship; and of time.
Through a series of case studies keyed to a wide variety of social and cultural contexts, including theatre, the early novel, the art of portraiture, pictorial experiments in vision and perception, theory of knowledge, and the new experimental science of the late-seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the book examines the manifold shapes person assumed as an expression of the social, natural, and aesthetic 'experiments' or experiences to which it found itself subjected as a function of the mere contingent fact of just having them.
Table of Contents:
Introduction. Changing the Subject: Early Modern Persons and the Culture of Experiment
1. The Shape of Knowledge: The Culture of Experiment and the Byways of Expression
2. The Art of the Inside Out: Vision and Expression in Hoogstraten’s London Peepshow
3. Persons and Portraits: The Vicissitudes of Burckhardt’s Individual
4. Justice in the Marketplace: The Invisible Hand in Ben Jonson’s Bartholomew Fayre
5. Actor, Act, and Action: The Poetics of Agency in Corneille, Racine, and Molière
6. The Experiment of Beauty: Vraisemblance Extraordinaire in Lafayette’s Princesse de Clèves
7. Groping in the Dark: Aesthetics and Ontology in Diderot and Kant
Conclusion. Person, Experiment, and the World They Made
About the Author :
Christopher Braider is a professor of French and Comparative Literature at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Review :
"Braider’s command of literature, history of ideas, and his ability to make philosophers, scientists, and writers think together is definitely impressive and insightful."
- Christophe Schuwey, Yale University (University of Toronto Quarterly: Letters in Canada 2018) "Experimental Selves joins a growing number of studies of early modern personhood... Braider explores the idea that, as he puts it, 'person itself is experiment' at length in relation to early modern theatre."
- Charles T. Wolfe, Cá’Foscari University (Publishing Research Quarterly)