1st Edition

Gut, Brain, and Environment in Nineteenth-Century French Literature and Medicine

By Manon Mathias Copyright 2024
278 Pages
by Routledge

278 Pages
by Routledge

278 Pages
by Routledge

Gut, Brain, and Environment in Nineteenth-Century French Literature and Medicine offers a new way of conceptualizing food in literature: not as social or cultural symbol but as an agent within a network of relationships between body and mind and between humans and environment. By analysing gastrointestinal health in medical, literary, and philosophical texts, this volume rethinks the... Read more

Introduction               

                       

Chapter 1. Digestion and human identity: Sand, Balzac, Flaubert

                                                                                                           

Chapter 2. ‘Une poétique de rebut’: re-thinking guts as interface

 

Chapter 3. Digestion and brain work in Zola and Huysmans

                                                                                                                       

Chapter 4. Autointoxication theory: the gut-psyche-bacteria connection

           

Conclusion

Biography

Manon Mathias is Lecturer in French at the University of Glasgow. Her research examines interactions between literature, science, and medicine in nineteenth-century France. She co-edited Gut Feeling and Digestive Health in Nineteenth-Century Literature, History and Culture (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018) and is the author of Vision in the Novels of George Sand (Oxford University Press, 2016).