Abstract or Keywords
In 1672, the French writer and salonnière Madeleine de Scudéry warmly received two reptiles into her Parisian home. Sent from Alexandria, these chameleons represent a turning point in the history of emotions and science, as written by a woman during the Grand Siècle. More than a decade after their arrival, Scudéry published her scientific observations and her deeply emotive account of their lives in New Moral Conversations ( Nouvelles Conversations de Morale ) in 1688 as “Story of Two Chameleons” (“Histoire de deux caméléons”). In this article, I argue that scientific discourse and affective moments coexist to construct a landmark moment in how emotions were written, felt, and understood in seventeenth-century France. Through Scudéry’s brief but evocative text, we see Scudéry first use, and then subvert, the Cartesian animal-machine, and build shared emotional communities through a fusion of science and emotions that tap into cross-species shared affective circuits.