James McHugh offers the first comprehensive examination of the concepts and practices related to smell in pre-modern India. Drawing on a wide range of textual sources, from poetry to medical texts, he shows the deeply significant religious and cultural role of smell in India throughout the first millennium CE. McHugh describes sophisticated arts of perfumery, developed in temples, monasteries, and courts, which resulted in worldwide ocean trade. He shows that various religious discourses on the purpose of life emphasized the pleasures of the senses, including olfactory experience, as a valid end in themselves. Fragrances and stenches were analogous to certain values, aesthetic or ethical, and in a system where karmic results often had a sensory impact-where evil literally stank-the ethical and aesthetic became difficult to distinguish. Sandalwood and Carrion explores smell in pre-modern India from many perspectives, covering such topics as philosophical accounts of smell perception, odors in literature, the history of perfumery in India, the significance of sandalwood in Buddhism, and the divine offering of perfume to the gods.
James McHugh offers the first comprehensive examination of the concepts and practices related to smell in pre-modern India.
In exploring the history of smell in South Asia, the study examines a number of major discourses concerning smell.
The first comprehensive book on alcohol in pre-modern India, An Unholy Brew: Alcohol in Indian History and Religions uses a wide range of sources from the Vedas to the Kamasutra to explore drinks and styles of drinking, as well as ...
While the senses have received increasing scholarly attention in recent decades, this volume presents the first detailed research into the sense of smell in the later European Middle Ages.
In this comprehensive and engaging volume, medical historian Jonathan Reinarz offers a historiography of smell from ancient to modern times.
McHugh J (2012) Sandalwood and Carrion: smell in Indian religion and culture. Oxford University Press, UK 15. McWilliam A (2005) Haumeni, not many: renewed plunder and mismanagement in the Timorese sandalwood industry.
McHugh, Sandalwood and Carrion, 145. McHugh, Sandalwood and Carrion, 121–28. McHugh, Sandalwood and Carrion, 148–49. McHugh, Sandalwood and Carrion, 153–56. See also David Howes, “Future of Scents Past,” in Smith, Smell and History, ...
Ann Smart Martin provides answers to these questions by examining the texture of trade on the edge of the upper Shenandoah Valley between 1760 and 1810.
See McHugh, “Sandalwood and Carrion,” ch. 3 and 4 for a discussion of such texts. 189. Smith, Sensing the Past, 118–25. 190. I should add that such reconstruction is not the only way in which one might come to such conclusions.
" In this book, David L. Haberman examines the perplexing paradox of an infinite god embodied in finite form, wherein each particular form is non-different from the unlimited.