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A History of the Wind

A Corbin William Peniston

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English
Polity Press
26 January 2023
Everyone knows the wind's touch, its presence, its force. Sometimes it roars and howls, at other times we hear its wistful sighs and feel its soothing caresses. Since antiquity, humans have borne witness to the wind and relied on it to navigate the seas. And yet, despite its presence at the heart of human experience, the wind has evaded scrutiny in our chronicles of the past.

In this brilliantly original volume, Alain Corbin sets out to illuminate the wind's storied history. He shows how, before the nineteenth century, the noisy emptiness of wind was experienced and described only according to the sensations it provoked. Imagery of the wind featured prominently in literature, from the ancient Greek epics through the Renaissance and romanticism to the modern era, but little was known about where the wind came from and where it went. It was only in the late eighteenth century, with the discovery of the composition of air, that scientists began to understand the nature of wind and its trajectories. From that point on, our understanding of the wind was shaped by meteorology, which mapped the flows of winds and currents around the globe. But while science has enabled us to understand the wind and, in some respects, to harness it, the wind has lost nothing of its mysterious force. It still has the power to destroy, and in the wind's ethereal presence we can still feel its connection with creation and death.

By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Polity Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 223mm,  Width: 139mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   324g
ISBN:   9781509552054
ISBN 10:   1509552057
Pages:   170
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Translator's Note Acknowledgements Prelude Chapter 1: The Inscrutable Wind Chapter 2: The Winds of the Common Folk Chapter 3: The Aeolian Harp Chapter 4: New Experiences of the Wind The Balloon At the Head of the Wind The Sandstorm in the Desert The Wind in the Sequoias Chapter 5: The Tenacity of the Aeolian Imagination in the Bible Chapter 6: The Epic Power of the Wind Chapter 7: The Fantasy of the Wind in the Enlightenment Chapter 8: Gentle Breezes and Caressing Currents Chapter 9: The Enigma of the Wind in the Nineteenth Century Chapter 10: Short Strolls in the Wind of the Twentieth Century Chapter 11: The Wind, the Theater, and Cinema Postlude Notes Index

Alain Corbin is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Paris I, Pantheon-Sorbonne.

Reviews for A History of the Wind

The free-wheeling and pioneering imagination of master historian Alain Corbin lends itself to conjuring the history of topics - smell, sound, sensibility, silence, anonymity - seemingly devoid of history. Written with distinctive clarity, insight and erudition, A History of the Wind is a captivating study that will open readers' sense to the feeling of the past. Colin Jones, Queen Mary University Throughout his career, Alain Corbin's gift has been to reveal the histories of things unseen. At once concise and panoramic, A History of the Wind ranges with Corbin's characteristic imagination and verve across the arts and sciences as it seeks to understand humanity's encounter with this ever-present yet elusive phenomenon. William A. Peniston's translation allows an English-speaking audience to savour this late work from one of France's greatest living historians. Robert D. Priest, Royal Holloway, University of London The wind has figured in many of Alain Corbin's earlier histories: it carries the sound of bells and of silence, of odors foul and fragrant; it refreshes the air of the seaside. In his newest and most wide-ranging book - from antiquity to the last century - it is the main character: the subject of science, the instrument of God's wrath, the motor of ships, a terror, a blessing, a wrecker. Less history than the biography of the great sea of air in which we dwell. Thomas Laqueur, University of California, Berkeley


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