<p>"Opening a new chapter in the archaeology of knowledge and the body, <i>How We Became Sensorimotor</i> charts how the inchoate mass of sensations within the bodily interior became the focus of increasingly intensive scientific inquiry from the mid-1800s onwards. To read this deeply touching book is to come to know one’s innermost self from a rigorously empirical and objective yet intimately familiar angle."—David Howes, author of <i>The Sensory Studies Manifesto</i></p><p>"Through rigorous archival research and fieldwork, Mark Paterson meticulously documents the historical practices that made the ‘sensorimotor’ body a thinkable concept. Crisscrossing neurology, experimental physiology, phenomenology, and chronophotography, <i>How We Become Sensorimotor</i> tells the fascinating story of the academic disciplines and artistic worlds that lodged internal sensations at the core of what it means to be a body."—Erica Fretwell, author of <i>Sensory Experiments: Psychophysics, Race, and the Aesthetics of Feeling</i></p>
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Mark Paterson is associate professor of sociology at the University of Pittsburgh. He is author of The Senses of Touch: Haptics, Affects and Technologies and Seeing with the Hands: Blindness, Vision and Touch after Descartes, as well as coeditor of Touching Space, Placing Touch.