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9 - The Age of Irritability

from Part II - Case Studies in the Digital History of Ideas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 November 2023

Peter de Bolla
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

This chapter probes the conceptual architecture of irritability in the eighteenth century. It justifies this case study not through a pre-established research agenda but because automated statistical comparisons reveal a marked transformation both in the term itself and in the broader network in which it is embedded. Irritability has long been marginalised in favour of its sister term, sensibility; yet we demonstrate the abiding significance of the former, in a variety of canonical works (Erasmus Darwin, Edmund Burke) and less familiar medical handbooks. This largely overlooked medical discourse infuses broader thinking on gender, colonialism and aesthetics; it worries the distinction between human and non-human life. We conclude by proving that the emergence of the irritability network holds significant consequences for other forms of conceptual thinking. In particular, we show how it affords a rethinking of the notion of habit, and facilitates the transformation of the cultural concept of system from a largely Newtonian and mechanistic notion, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, to an increasingly dynamical and physiological entity.

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Chapter
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Explorations in the Digital History of Ideas
New Methods and Computational Approaches
, pp. 184 - 205
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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