What the Nose Knows - Avery Gilbert [132]
“This strange revival of bygone days” Dan McKenzie, Aromatics and the Soul: A Study of Smells (London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1923), p. 50.
Shattuck took a close look Roger Shattuck, Proust’s Way: A Field Guide to In Search of Lost Time (New York: W. W. Norton, 2000).
Proust’s sensory imagery Victor E. Graham, The Imagery of Proust (Oxford, England: Basil Blackwell, 1966), pp. 8, 106.
poetry of Shelley and Keats Mary Grace Caldwell, “A Study of the Sense Epithets of Shelley and Keats,” Poet Lore 10 (1898):573–79.
“a flood of visual images” Graham, The Imagery of Proust.
“I believe that odors” Poe, Marginalia, 1844.
other writers were exploring Louise Fiske Bryson, “Training the Memory,” Harper’s Bazaar, September 1903, p. 824; “Scent and Memory,” The Spectator (London), July 11, 1908, pp. 52–53, reprinted in The Living Age (Boston), November 14, 1908, pp. 437–39; “magically transported,” Graham, The Imagery of Proust, p. 107.
thoroughly psychological Sherman, “The Redolent World,” p. 319.
“These flashes of memory” Ellwood Hendrick, “The sense of smell,” The Atlantic Monthly, March 1913, pp. 332–37.
“The coincidence is not fortuitous” Charles Rosen, “Now, Voyager,” The New York Review of Books, November 6, 1986, p. 55. According to Rosen, Proust took another writer to task for praising Ramond, specifically for praising this very passage of Ramond’s.
Contemporary French psychology Théodule Ribot, La Psychologie des sentiments (Paris: Félix Alcan, 1896), translated as The Psychology of the Emotions (London: Walter Scott Ltd., 1897), ch. 11, “The Memory of Feelings.” For another example, see F. Pillon, “La Mémoire Affective: son Importance Théorique et Pratique,” Revue Philosophique 51 (February 1901):113–38.
Sometimes, when passing through” Henri Piéron, “La Question de la Mémoire Affective,” Revue Philosophique 54 (December 1902):612–15, translation by Laurence Dryer.
“can only be termed ingenuous” Shattuck, Proust’s Way, p. 115.
sinister speculation Marc A. Weiner, “Zwieback and Madeleine: Creative Recall in Wagner and Proust,” MLN 95 (1980):679–84.
“The Proustian view” T. Engen and B. M. Ross, “Long-term memory of odors with and without verbal descriptions,” Journal of Experimental Psychology 100 (1973):221–27.
“negative experimental results” J. M. Annett, “Olfactory memory: A case study in cognitive psychology,” Journal of Psychology 130 (1996):309–19.
observed classic interference effects H. A. Walk and E. E. Johns, “Interference and facilitation in short-term memory for odors,” Perception & Psychophysics 36 (1984):508–14;T. L. White, “Olfactory memory: The long and short of it,” Chemical Senses 23 (1998):433–41.
“the first unequivocal demonstration” Herz and Schooler, “A naturalistic study,” pp. 21–32.
“we did not find support” J. Willander and M. Larsson, “Smell your way back to childhood: Autobiographical odor memory,” Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 13 (2006):240–44.
criticized previous studies S. Chu and J. J. Downes, “Odour-evoked autobiographical memories: Psychological investigations of proustian phenomena,” Chemical Senses 25 (2000):111–16.
came a quick challenge J. S. Jellinek, “Proust remembered: Has Proust’s account of odor-cued autobiographical memory recall really been investigated?” Chemical Senses 29 (2004):455–58.
studies now claim Chu and Downes, “Proust nose best” Willander and Larsson, “Smell your way back to childhood.”
A Norwegian survey S. Magnussen, J. Andersson, et al., “What people believe about memory,” Memory 14 (2006):595–613.
“When I was a boy” Haydn S. Pearson, New England Flavor: Memories of a Country Boyhood (New York: W. W. Norton, 1961).
“A time like that” Ben Logan, The Land Remembers: The Story of a Farm and Its People (New York: Viking, 1975).
“I grew up on the Nevada desert” Donald A. Laird, “Some normal odor effects and associations of psychoanalytic significance,” Psychoanalytic Review 21 (1934):194–200.
Chapter 11. The Smell Museum
“My collection of semi-used perfumes” Andy Warhol, The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (From A to B and Back Again) (New