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Handicraft Philosophies

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The term "Enlightenment" still carries its tie to a grand philosophical tradition that in Britain moves through Bacon, Locke, and Hume. But the literature and philosophy of the Enlightenment was fu...
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  • 03 June 2025
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The term "Enlightenment" still carries its tie to a grand philosophical tradition that in Britain moves through Bacon, Locke, and Hume. But the literature and philosophy of the Enlightenment was full of practical knowledge associated with the body and with craft. This book is an account of the eighteenth-century thinkers from across social classes who turned to the body to formulate new ways of knowing natural and social worlds—what Ruth Mack calls handicraft philosophies.

  The writers discussed in this book include a formerly enslaved man, Olaudah Equiano, and a washerwoman, Mary Collier, as well as gentlemen Joseph Banks and James Boswell, and the artist William Hogarth. In their efforts to communicate embodied ways of knowing, they bring together theory and practice; they set aside objectivity and relish the practical ways of knowing that are traditionally associated with lower classes and less-than-privileged bodies. Mack focuses on how such knowledge proved especially helpful for understanding "society" as a new object of enquiry in the Enlightenment, laying the groundwork for the emergence of anthropological and sociological thought.

  Complicating the intellectual history of Enlightenment Britain amidst the rise of popular science and imperial expansion, Handicraft Philosophies is a new account of the thinkers who configured "philosophy" as a practice open to all.

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Price: $32.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 03 June 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503642935
Format: Paperback
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"Handicraft Philosophies offers a groundbreaking and original argument. In redefining our understanding of intellectual history to embrace the forms of knowledge incarnated in work and labor, Mack invites a broader reappraisal of the literary and philosophical canon." —Lynn Festa, Rutgers University
Ruth Mack is Associate Professor of English at the University at Buffalo, SUNY. She is the author of Literary Historicity: Literature and Historical Experience in Eighteenth-Century Britain (Stanford, 2008).
INTRODUCTION: Making Social Knowledge
1. EDUCATION: Crime, Punishment, and Realism in Defoe
2. LABOR: Craft Poetry in Duck and Collier
3. ART: Handicraft Lines in Hogarth
4. SCIENCE: Practicing Science in Banks's Tahiti
5. USE: Useless Bodies in Johnson and Boswell
6. FETISH: Equiano's Antislavery Craft
CODA: Handicraft Humanities?