2020
DOI: 10.3828/eir.2020.27.2.3
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Sensitive Plants and Senseless Weeds: Plants, Consciousness, and Elizabeth Kent

Abstract: When a team of researchers in 2018 found that plants exposed to anesthesia appeared to lose consciousness, the press reported that plants might have a consciousness to lose. The ensuing debate revealed a gap between scientific and literary approaches to human and nonhuman consciousness that this article traces back to the botanical writing of the Romantic period. These concerns, I argue, are central to Elizabeth Kent’s Flora Domestica (1823) and Sylvan Sketches (1825), both botanical works that double as liter… Show more

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