Thinking Multisensory Culture
Thinking Multisensory Culture
Thinking Multisensory Culture
LAURA U. MARKS
Abstract:
The scholarly turn toward visual culture has left in place the sensory hierarchy
that subtends Western philosophy. Yet given the commodification of sense
experience, an inversion of the sensory hierarchy with the proximal senses of
touch, taste, and smell at the top is not necessarily any more conducive to
knowledge or justice. I argue that proximal sense experience may be a vehicle
of knowledge, beauty and even ethics. Operating at a membrane between the
sensible and the thinkable, the proximal senses have an affective dimension that
permits an immanent epistemology. My examples and olfactory ‘illustrations’
emphasize the sense of smell, which, I posit, given its intimacy with emotion
and memory, gives rise to an ‘olfactory unconscious’.
Visual and cultural studies were founded in the intention to correct the
apparent elitism and disciplinary narrowness of art history and related
disciplines. However, the turn toward visual culture has left in place the
sensory hierarchy that subtends Western philosophy, in which only the
distance senses are vehicles of knowledge, and Western aesthetics, in
which only vision and hearing can be vehicles of beauty. It seems that
the democratization of the object of aesthetic study to include high and
low or popular arts has not really extended to non-visual objects, except
for the audiovisual arts such as cinema.
The neglect of touch, smell, and taste (and to some extent, hearing)
in visual culture descends particularly, of course, from art history, and
generally, from the tendency to dismiss the proximal senses as inferior
that underpins Western thought. To include sense experience in our
cultural analysis, we need to revisit the sensory hierarchy — while trying
to retain the capacity for aesthetic judgement, knowledge, and ethics
associated with the ‘higher’ senses. And we have to do it before the new
marketing of all sense experience does it for us. Recent questions of the
affective dimension of sensuous experience permit new dimensions of
epistemology and ethics that are immanent, grounded in the
particularity of experience. Sense experience operates at a membrane
between the sensible and the thinkable, and as Jacques
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Smell, taste, and touch have to do with matter as such and its immediately
sensuous qualities... . For this reason these senses cannot have to do with artistic
objects, which are meant to maintain themselves in their real independence and
allow of no purely sensuous relationship. What is agreeable for these senses is not
the beauty of art.6
The place left for sensuous refinement is pleasure — the proximal senses
are hedonic.
I propose that the proximal senses, touch, taste, and smell, are not
only hedonic but may also be senses of knowledge (epistemology),
vehicles of beauty (aesthetics), and even media of ethics. In this article
my examples focus around smell — somewhat artificially, since most
sensory events combine the experience of several senses simultaneously,
but for purposes of argument. Why smell in particular? Because smell
often brings with it a freight of personal affect: it seems to be the least
translatable and most personal of all the senses. Smells can be
semantically coded, but less easily than other sense perceptions for this
reason. If smell can be a medium of shared knowledge, then I’d argue
any sense can. I also note that smell may be the sense that best shows
the mutual limits of psychoanalysis and non-psychoanalytic affect
theory, in that the former pays little attention to the singularity of sense
experience, while the latter does not have a repression, both of which
are important in the experience of smell.
What you have been smelling is oil of truffles, which many people
find has a provocatively, even unbearably gamy smell. Note how it’s
reassuring to have a name associated with what you smelled. In fact,
you may be able to smell it better now: studies show that an odour
smells stronger when the smeller knows what it is. When you smelled
what turned out to be truffles, you may well have thought you smelled
human body odour, or some other organic smell that many people find
noxious. Though semantically identifying the source of the smell
probably makes it less noxious, you were in a sense right. Truffles have
a chemical fingerprint that’s close to human body odour. This is why
female pigs are used to hunt truffles. Truffles secrete a steroid, 5-
alphaandrostenol, that is the same steroid that male pigs secrete to
advertise their sexual availability; it’s also in human male perspiration
and female urine.
This three-part smell story — smelling, associating, knowing —
shows that the ideal semantic window for perceiving smells may be in
the middle of their signifying spectrum. When we know too little, or
too much, about a smell, it moves beyond the heimlich: it ceases to
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Kindi (d. 866) on music adopted the Greek doctrine relating elements
and humours to notes and rhythms. He developed a kind of
multisensory therapy combining music, colours and perfumes.10 Islamic
aesthetics generally created a place for all the senses, as when Ibn Al-
Haytham (d. 1039), author of the Optics, described perception to
consist of a compound of sensations that are mentally compared, as in
the sight, sound, and smell experienced by a man sitting on a riverbank
listening to music and admiring lovely women.11 Arab cultivation of
olfactory knowledge and pleasure remains in customs like offering
perfumes to guests, maintaining an interpersonal distance close enough
to allow both parties to smell each other, and the cultivation of fragrant
gardens as terrestrial reminders of paradise. And of course Arab and
Indian olfactory pleasure was adapted by European wealthy classes of
the Middle Ages, whose eagerness for pepper, cinnamon, cardamom,
and myrrh spurred explorers to discover continents.
Recent scholarship is beginning to develop a multisensory
Archaeology of Knowledge. Currently this is the domain mainly of
sensory anthropology descending from Marshall McLuhan and Walter
Ong, as in the work of historian Constance Classen and anthropologist
David Howes. Scholars of ‘visual culture’ and cultural history can
pursue the questions: what are the cultural, epistemological, economic
currents that inform the development of some sense knowledges, the
repression of others, and relations among them?
and bath products emphasize the time of consumption, ‘time for me’;
they sell a product in the name of creating free time, and their principal
target seems to be harried, hard-working women.16 Sensuous pleasure is
sold to us fundamentally to ensure that we get back to work — relaxed,
refreshed, and ready. Thus one of the most cynical promises of the new
sensuous commodities is that they will give people more time.
Sensuous refinement now serves mainly hedonic ends; the aesthetic,
epistemological, and ethical dimensions of sensuous experience are far
from the commodity landscape. The ‘emancipation of the senses’
envisioned by Fourier is only a further enslavement if our senses are
marshalled only for the purposes of consumption. The proximal senses,
in their intimacy, relation to memory (especially smell), and affective
intensity, are the very senses most resistant to mass communication.
Sensory commodities that invade and encode the private space of the
proximal senses are threatening this resistance.
any time soon. The perfume monger fills the little vials with a syringe
of precious oil, then in a jolly manner sprays the remaining drops at
customers, who spread out their arms to be engulfed by fragrance. It’s
a social atmosphere of shared smelling.
This time I happened to look at the vat from which the vendor
syringe-extracted the precious oil of jasmine that is so typical of this part
of the world. It — this jasmine you are perhaps smelling — was a
German synthetic. Complex original smells are being replaced by
synthetic smells at what ought to be the center of original smells, the
library of real smells, the Damascus perfume souk. Synthetic jasmine is
like a photocopy of jasmine, approximating its complexity with a
compound of a few chemicals and a strong base note of petroleum. (By
contrast, it seems to me that real jasmine has a base note of excrement,
which is perhaps why jasmine is planted outside lavatories.) Such
economically driven smell replacements worry me the way a film
archivist would be worried if all the 35mm reels were replaced by
MPEGs. What will we study in the future; with what will we enrich
and educate our senses?
Yet the socialness of the perfume souk at Hamadiya involves another
dimension of smell experience that is perhaps more durable than smell
itself.
I have mentioned a few times the ethical dimension of multisensory
experience, and it is high time to explain this seeming oxymoron. It has
to do with the position of the proximal senses on the membrane
between shared and private, codified and uncodable experience — on
the middle bandwidth of sense experience. Korsmeyer, a philosopher,
argues (against Bourdieu) that the philosophical baby can indeed be
retained when we toss out the bath water of purist aesthetics: the issue
is what kinds of philosophical treatment do the close senses invite? (66).
Her answer involves the nature of the proximal senses as both objective
and subjective: capable of being directed outward (epistemological), and
inward (hedonic) within a set of bodily and cultural limitations (94–8).
Thus the proximal senses operate at the literal border between the
intimate and the communal. Knowledge and communication that
makes use of them may lose in ‘objectivity’ but it gains in depth, trust,
and sociality.
Recall that incommunicable dimension of sensuous experience,
which I qualified as comprising an olfactory unconscious. We might
refer to this incommunicable dimension, adapting Spinoza’s ethics, as
affect. Between passive and active, affect is a passion (Spinoza): an
intensity, an ‘excess,’ a suspension of the linear progress of narrative.17
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NOTES
1 Jacques Rancière, ‘What Aesthetics Can Mean’, translated by Brian Holmes,
in From an Aesthetic Point of View: Philosophy, Art and the Senses, edited
by Peter Osborne (London: Serpent’s Tail, 2000), 19.
2 Gilles Deleuze argues that an immanent infinite is to be found in the
particularity or haecceity of experience, in ‘The Simulacrum and Ancient
Philosophy’, Logic of Sense, edited by Constantin V. Boundas, translated by
Mark Lester (New York: Columbia University Press, 1990); see also Gilles
Deleuze and Félix Guattari, ‘What Is a Concept?’, What Is Philosophy?,
translated by Hugh Tomlinson and Graham Burchell (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1994), 15–34.
3 1. Truffle oil. 2. Jasmine oil.
4 Alnoor Dhanani, The Physical Theory of Kalam: Atoms, Space and Void in
Basrian Mu‘tazili Cosmology (Leiden, New York, and Cologne: E.J. Brill,
1994), 63.
5 Jonathan Rée, ‘The aesthetic theory of the arts,’ in Osborne, 57–9.
6 Cited in Carolyn Korsmeyer, Making Sense of Taste: Food and Philosophy
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1999), 61.
7 Mark Stopfer and Gilles Laurent, ‘Short-term memory in olfactory network
dynamics’, Nature 402 (9 December 1999), 664–8.
8 Alain Corbin, The Foul and the Fragrant: Odour and the French Social
Imagination, translated by Miriam Kochan, Roy Porter, and Christopher
Prendergast (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1986), 140–1.
9 David Howes, Sensual Relations: Engaging the Senses in Culture and Social
Theory (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2003).
10 Doris Behrens-Abouseif, Beauty in Arabic Culture (Princeton: Markus
Wiener, 1998), 69.
Thinking Multisensory Culture 137
11 Nasser Ahmad Nasir, ‘Ibn Al-Haitham and His Philosophy,’ in Ibn Al-
Haitham, edited by Hakim Mohammad Said (Karachi: Hamdard National
Foundation, 1969), 85.
12 Charles Sanders Peirce, ‘The Principles of Semiology’, in Philosophical
Writings of Peirce, edited by Justus Buchler (New York: Dover, 1955), 74–
97.
13 Constance Classen, The Color of Angels: Cosmology, Gender, and the
Aesthetic Imagination (New York: Routledge, 1998), 39.
14 Cited in Howes, 206.
15 Warren Belasco, ‘Food and the Counterculture: A Story of Bread and
Politics’, in The Cultural Politics of Food and Eating, edited by James L.
Watson and Melissa L. Caldwell (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), 221.
16 I thank Suzanne Lindgren, a student in Art and Culture Studies at Simon
Fraser University, for pointing out this temporal-olfactory paradox.
17 Brian Massumi, ‘The Autonomy of Affect,’ Parables for the Virtual:
Movement, Affect, Sensation (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
2002), 26.
18 Laura U. Marks, ‘The Logic of Smell,’ Touch: Sensuous Theory and
Multisensory Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002),
113–26.
19 I thank two groups of listeners for their helpful responses to this paper, at
Project for the Study of Visual Culture of the University of Southern
California, and the Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages at Cambridge
University.