Sensitive Witnesses
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Kristin M. Girten tells a new story of feminist knowledge-making in the Enlightenment era by exploring the British female philosophers who asserted their authority through the celebration of profoundly embodied observations, experiences, and experiments.
This book explores the feminist materialist practice of sensitive witnessing, establishing an alternate history of the emergence of the scientific method in the eighteenth century. Francis Bacon and other male natural philosophers regularly downplayed the embodied nature of their observations. They presented themselves as modest witnesses, detached from their environment and entitled to the domination and exploitation of it. In contrast, the author-philosophers that Girten takes up asserted themselves as intimately entangled with matter—boldly embracing their perceived close association with the material world as women. Girten shows how Lucy Hutchinson, Margaret Cavendish, Aphra Behn, Eliza Haywood, and Charlotte Smith took inspiration from materialist principles to challenge widely accepted "modest" conventions for practicing and communicating philosophy.
Forerunners of the feminist materialism of today, these thinkers recognized the kinship of human and nonhuman nature and suggested a more accessible, inclusive version of science. Girten persuasively argues that our understanding of Enlightenment thought must take into account these sensitive witnesses' visions of an alternative scientific method informed by profound closeness with the natural world.
—Jess Keiser, Tufts University
"Sensitive Witnesses is a fluently written and well-researched study that moves nimbly between philosophical sources and a wide range of literary genres to enrich our understanding of Enlightenment ways of knowing."
—Sarah Tindal Kareem, University of California, Los Angeles
"A figure for our own time, Girten's sensitive witness emerges as the unashamed hero of a history of scientific passions."
—Wendy Anne Lee, New York University
"Girten illuminates Enlightenment thinkers who utilized 'sublime knowledge-making and sensitive witnessing' to 'develop an appreciation for their continuity with the material world.' She also connects the Enlightenment past to the present, calling for 'a new, sensitive, "great instauration" in which we learn how to touch and be touched by nature, with a sense of continuity, relationality, gentleness, and care. Recommended.'"—M. G. Spencer, CHOICE