高度表 发表于 2025-3-28 17:49:00
,“To Rub the Nose in the Tea”: Smell, Taste, and the Assessment of Quality in Early Nineteenth-Centuy with the testimony provided by a broad range of tea dealers—brokers, wholesalers, and shopkeepers—who gave evidence before a Parliamentary Select Committee of 1834, established in the context of the imminent cessation of the East India Company’s ‘exclusive privilege’ over the importation of tea frextinct 发表于 2025-3-28 20:52:19
http://reply.papertrans.cn/87/8668/866711/866711_42.pngABYSS 发表于 2025-3-29 01:29:41
,The Politics of Sitting Down: Women, Cafés and Public Toilets in Dublin,cially if the seating was in proximity to men or alcohol. Therefore throughout most of the nineteenth century there was little or no seating available to respectable women in city centres. And yet during that century shops developed on the understanding that middle-class women would spend more and mIntentional 发表于 2025-3-29 03:03:55
Comfort and Safety: An Intersensorial History of Shopping Streets in Nineteenth-Century Amsterdam aand Brussels. Shopping in the nineteenth century has most often been linked to the rise of a spectacular culture. When engaging with the sensory aspects of shopping, scholars have spent most of their attention on its increased visual splendour. They have focused on the proliferation of the shop windfixed-joint 发表于 2025-3-29 11:15:15
The Cry of Silk: Erotomania and Fetishism in ,g some Parisian women with ‘erotomania’. The pathology of silk encompassed its smell and sound, in addition to its tactile qualities. De Clérambault’s patients would speak of ‘the cry of the silk’. The symptoms of these unhealthy longings for silk pervaded the senses: a desire to touch, being lured