How Do Ideas Spread?
How is it that certain ideas get taken up and lead to policy changes? In this video, KERSTIN MARIA PAHL looks at how an increasing interest in human feelings at the end of the eighteenth century underpinned subsequent efforts to abolish child labor. Employing semantic, sociological, quantitative and qualitative tools to trace philosophical alongside technological developments, Pahl’s interdisciplinary approach provides us with new insight on the “age of sensibility”. Ongoing work will explore the darker side of the prioritization of feelings in relation to missionary expeditions and military practice.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21036/LTPUB101134Researcher
Kerstin Maria Pahl is a researcher in the Centre for the History of Emotions at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development. Having completed her binational PhD in Art and Visual History at Humboldt University and King’s College London in 2018, Pahl has also worked at the Cultural Federation of the German States. Her research interests include the history of emotions, the history of knowledge and the culture of the Enlightenment. Pahl’s book, Visualizing Lives: Portraits and Biographies in England, c. 1680 to 1750, is scheduled for publication with Liverpool University Press in 2023.

Original Publication
Feeling Political
Ute Frévert
,Kerstin Maria Pahl
,Francesco Buscemi
,Philipp Nielsen
,Agnes Arndt
,Published in 2022