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  1.  14
    Bellies, bowels and entrails in the eighteenth century.Rebecca Anne Barr, Sylvie Kleiman-Lafon & Sophie Vasset (eds.) - 2018 - Manchester: Manchester University Press.
    This collection of essays seeks to challenge the notion of the supremacy of the brain as the key organ of the Enlightenment, by focusing on the workings of the bowels and viscera that so obsessed writers and thinkers during the long eighteenth-century. These inner organs and the digestive process acted as counterpoints to politeness and other modes of refined sociability, drawing attention to the deeper workings of the self. Moving beyond recent studies of luxury and conspicuous consumption, where dysfunctional bowels (...)
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  2. Desire, disgust and indigestibility in John Cleland's Memoirs of a Coxcomb.Rebecca Anne Barr - 2018 - In Rebecca Anne Barr, Sylvie Kleiman-Lafon & Sophie Vasset (eds.), Bellies, bowels and entrails in the eighteenth century. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
     
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  3. Introduction: entrails and digestion in the eighteenth century.Rebecca Anne Barr, Sylvie Kleiman-Lafon & Sophie Vasset - 2018 - In Rebecca Anne Barr, Sylvie Kleiman-Lafon & Sophie Vasset (eds.), Bellies, bowels and entrails in the eighteenth century. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
     
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  4.  8
    Uncivil Mirth: Ridicule in Enlightenment Britain Uncivil Mirth: Ridicule in Enlightenment Britain, by Ross Carroll, Princeton, NJ, and Oxford, UK, Princeton University Press, 2022, 280 pp., £28.00(pb), ISBN 978-06-91-24177-7. [REVIEW]Rebecca Anne Barr - 2024 - Intellectual History Review 34 (2):511-514.
    In contemporary thought, as in the long eighteenth century, the politics of ridicule is split between those who see it as fundamentally uncivil and those who advocate for its emancipatory potential...
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