Debates concerning the roles of sensory perceptions and responses in past societies are increasingly gaining traction in the archaeological discipline, but European medieval archaeology has only recently begun to engage with them. Moving beyond previous approaches in medieval studies that focused on the five physical senses, this article investigates material culture through the conceptual lens of sensory regimes. Drawing on case studies from the sixth to seventeenth centuries and examining diverse archaeological evidence—including artefacts, burial practices and urban environments—the author argues that material culture can facilitate or oppose social, political and religious regimes through sensory practices.
Read the publication at the Cambridge University Press
Media Echo by 'Antiquity':
https://bsky.app/profile/antiquity.ac.uk/post/3mfrcaag6dy2z
https://www.instagram.com/p/DVN5U8NEWxY
https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1396278939179030&set=a.438057335001200
