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From Perfectibility to Perversion

Meliorism in Eighteenth-Century France

by Michael E. Winston (Author)
©2005 Monographs XII, 192 Pages

Summary

From Perfectibility to Perversion: Meliorism in Eighteenth-Century France traces the evolution of human perfectibility discourse during the second half of the eighteenth century and the early post-Revolutionary era in France. Examining key articulations of Enlightenment meliorism as it shifts between open-ended models of human perfectibility and «fixist» conceptions of the human body, this book will appeal to a range of specialists because it draws on a variety of primary sources, from Buffon and Rousseau to important medical theorists of the pre- and post-Revolutionary period, and juxtaposes seemingly disparate domains of inquiry in informative and provocative fashion.

Details

Pages
XII, 192
Year
2005
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820474953
Language
English
Keywords
Frankreich Humanethologie Geschichte 1700-1800 Medicine Philosophy Pornography /France Eighteenth-Century Soziokultureller Wandel Literature France
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2005. XII, 192 pp.

Biographical notes

Michael E. Winston (Author)

The Author: Michael E. Winston is Assistant Professor of French at the University of Oklahoma. He received his Ph.D. from Emory University with a dissertation on the representation of sexuality in French Enlightenment medicine, literature, and philosophy. His research focuses on the intersections between medicine, literature, and philosophy in Enlightenment France.

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Title: From Perfectibility to Perversion