The Body Economic revises the intellectual history of
nineteenth-century Britain by demonstrating that political economists
and the writers who often presented themselves as their literary
antagonists actually held most of their basic social assumptions in
common. Catherine Gallagher demonstrates that political economists and
their Romantic and early-Victorian critics jointly relocated the idea of
value from the realm of transcendent spirituality to that of organic
"life," making human sensations--especially pleasure and pain--the
sources and signs of that value. Classical political economy, this book
shows, was not a mechanical ideology but a form of nineteenth-century
organicism, which put the body and its feelings at the center of its
theories, and neoclassical economics built itself even more
self-consciously on physiological premises.
The Body Economic explains how these shared views of life, death, and
sensation helped shape and were modified by the two most important
Victorian novelists: Charles Dickens and George Eliot. It reveals how
political economists interacted crucially with the life sciences of the
nineteenth century--especially with psychophysiology and
anthropology--producing the intellectual world that nurtured not only
George Eliot's realism but also turn-of-the-century literary modernism.