About the talk:
The anthropology of smell examines socially and culturally determined perceptions of smell and culturally specific properties of smell. Because smell has long been considered the inferior of the senses, the antropology of smell is interested in, on the one hand, the sociocultural factors that influence odour perception and cultivation, and, on the other hand, the odours that shape our attentiveness to others, our cultural identity, our social relations, and our power relations. In addition, the anthropology of smell examines the symbolic dimensions of smells in everyday life, ranging from love to hatred of the “other”, and the ways in which smells are verbalised. In an applied sense, the athropology of smell, in its interdisciplinary breadth, is involved in the didactic forms of presenting smells from the past in museums, galleries, and libraries, in the use of stimulations and imitations of smells produced for consumer needs, and in the social consequences of the new technologies of artificial smell (e-nose) that are already being used in several fields.