•  191
    This paper examines how perfume in early modern France was reclassified from a therapeutic substance within medical practice to a luxury commodity associated with fashion, hygiene, and social distinction. In the late seventeenth century, perfumes were embedded in pharmacological traditions and were used as technologies of air purification and bodily protection within humoral and miasmatic medical frameworks. By the eighteenth century, however, transformations in medical authority, court culture,…Read more
  •  140
    Olfaction has historically occupied an unstable position within scientific and philosophical accounts of knowledge. Because smell is often treated as subjective, private, and difficult to quantify, it has been marginalized within epistemologies that privilege vision, measurement, and mechanical objectivity. Contemporary olfactory science complicates this hierarchy. Modern research environments increasingly rely on trained sensory experts such as perfumers, evaluators, and sensory panelists whose…Read more