Evident Tongues, Evident Bodies: Language, Sense, And Proof
10 December 2025, 2:30 pm–4:00 pm
This reading group explores how early-modern writers connected linguistic encounters with sensory encounters of seeing, hearing, touching, tasting, and smelling in the production of evidence.
Event Information
Open to
- All
Organiser
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Rana Banna and Mary Newman
Location
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Room 11, first floor, South WingUCL, Gower St,LondonWC1E 6BTUnited Kingdom
This reading group explores how early-modern writers connected linguistic encounters – through translation, foreign tongues, unreadable scripts, religious chants, magical spells, or scientific language – with sensory encounters of seeing, hearing, touching, tasting, and smelling in the production of evidence, tracing how these ideas also resonate across earlier and later periods.
It examines the ways in which language and the senses work together to collect evidence: how words, sounds, and sensations become sites of truth, persuasion, or belief. Participants are invited to consider the ways in which scientists, theologians, magicians, colonial travellers, rhetoricians, and poets have documented the relationship between speech and perception, and how they might have imagined the senses as instruments for knowing the world.
This group brings together scholars and researchers from diverse fields and periods to discuss how verbal and sensory forms of proof shape what we take as credible, knowable, or real.
If you have any questions or want to join the mailing list please contact the convenors, Rana Banna (r.banna@ucl.ac.uk) and Mary Newman (uclmmkn@ucl.ac.uk)
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