Everybody Matters:
Science and the Corporeal
in 1790s Literature

by Elisa Lenssen


"The morally best, the most beautiful.
The morally worst, the most deformed."

--Johann Caspar Lavater, "On the Harmony between Moral and Corporeal Beauty," Physiognomische Fragmente

"What is your fortune, my pretty maid?"
"My face is my fortune, sir," she said"

--English Nursery Rhyme

"We do not have to visit a madhouse to find disordered minds; our planet is the mental institution of the universe."
--Johann von Goethe


This site will explore scientific thought at the turn of the nineteenth century to analyze representations of the body in fiction and political literature. Specifically, the site will focus on beliefs and literary portraits pertaining to the human countenance--i.e. Johann Caspar Lavater's physiognomy--as well as to the nervous system, madness, crying and hysteria. The age of revolution was also the age of nearly omnipresent scientific theory. Science was pop culture in the 1790s, and often representations of that time's cultural assumptions within literature are overlooked or misunderstood by readers. This site will work to prevent such confusion by presenting the tenets of contemporary thought alongside textual allusions. This site does not claim to provide an exhaustive history of science and its influence on literature, but it is deisnged so as to provide cohesive fodder for further undergraduate thought, discussion, and research.

To continue, follow one of the three following links or simply click Next Page at the bottom of your screen.

  • The face as moral map: physiognomy

  • The eye as window: crying and coloration

  • The body as release: hysteria / The brain as disease: madness

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    Relevant Bibliography Entries


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