Publié le 17 janvier 2023–Mis à jour le 4 mars 2024
Partager cette page
Guest Lecture : Sarah Benharrech
Partager cette page
Plants as Machines, Beehives or Corals: Analogies in 18th-Century Plant Science
Sarah Benharrech est Professeure Associée de Français à l'Ecole des Langues, Littératures et Cultures de l'Université du Maryland.
Borrowing from the methodologies of literary analysis, cultural studies and the anthropology of nature, this presentation explores how empirical observations of trees’ asexual reproduction challenged long-established analogies in 18th-century naturalist texts.
In the late 17th and early 18th centuries, Cartesian Mechanicism was the dominant explanatory system that reduced trees to machines. The image also inferred that each plant is an individual with a predictable development, a defined shape and a limited lifespan. Yet, gardeners knew empirically that trees are both singular and collective beings, because of their abilities to duplicate themselves through root sprouts, runners, etc., as well as because of their growth pattern, a process called “reiteration” whereby a tree is a collection of smaller trees. The machine model was thus deemed inadequate for conceptualizing plant growth and multiplication. French Enlightenment botanists sought alternatives and found new representations in social insects, polyps and corals that they deemed more consistent with their understanding of plants.
My presentation attempts to capture this epistemological shift from the machine paradigm to the vitalist image of collective animals. Using examples from gardening treatises, natural history compilations and fictions, I will reflect on how analogies shaped 18th-century plant science.
Biographical blurb:
Sarah Benharrech (Ph.D., Princeton University) specializes in Enlightenment Studies, Gender Studies, Plant Studies, and Ecocriticism.
Her first book, Marivaux et la science du caractère (Oxford, UK: The Voltaire Foundation, 2013), explored moral classifications in Early Enlightenment literature in relation to 18th-century debates on taxonomy in the natural sciences. She is working on her second book project, tentatively entitled The Dreams of Plants, where she is examining processes of acculturation of plants knowledge in 18th-century French fiction. Drawing from anthropology and the environmental humanities, her research questions early modern and early Enlightenment cosmologies as cultural mediations of vegetal alterity.
Date: 21 février 2023 de 12h30 à 14h00
La guest lecture hybride est organisée en présence à l'Auditorium de la MIR à Neuville-sur-Oise et à distance sur Zoom.
Pour participer à la guest lecture à distance, connectez-vous sur Zoom : https://cyu-fr.zoom.us/j/93808380481