This article explores how historians of emotions and historians of the senses can collaborate to write a history of emotional experience that takes seriously the corporeality of emotions. It investigates how smell, feelings of disgust, and the moral judgments associated with these feelings were interrelated in 20th-century German cancer history. It demonstrates that this complex decisively shaped the emotional experiences of cancer patients. Uncovering this dynamic is only possible by conjoining the history of emotions with a more expanded version of the history of the senses. The combination reveals that the “odor of disgust” was not an ahistorical constant, but was, both in its parts and as a whole, subject to considerable shifts.
CITATION STYLE
Hitzer, B. (2020). The Odor of Disgust: Contemplating the Dark Side of 20th-Century Cancer History. Emotion Review, 12(3), 156–167. https://doi.org/10.1177/1754073919897293
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