Evolution And Victorian Culture

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Evolution and Victorian Culture

Author : Bernard V. Lightman,Bennett Zon
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 347 pages
File Size : 48,5 Mb
Release : 2014-05-29
Category : Art
ISBN : 9781107028425

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Evolution and Victorian Culture by Bernard V. Lightman,Bennett Zon Pdf

These essays examine the dynamic interplay between evolution and Victorian culture, mapping new relationships between the arts and sciences.

Evolution and the Victorians

Author : Jonathan Conlin
Publisher : A&C Black
Page : 224 pages
File Size : 43,7 Mb
Release : 2014-01-16
Category : History
ISBN : 9781441187529

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Evolution and the Victorians by Jonathan Conlin Pdf

Charles Darwin's discovery of evolution by natural selection was the greatest scientific discovery of all time. The publication of his 1859 book, On the Origin of Species, is normally taken as the point at which evolution erupted as an idea, radically altering how the Victorians saw themselves and others. This book tells a very different story. Darwin's discovery was part of a long process of negotiation between imagination, faith and knowledge which began long before 1859 and which continues to this day. Evolution and the Victorians provides historians with a survey of the thinkers and debates implicated in this process, from the late 18th century to the First World War. It sets the history of science in its social and cultural context. Incorporating text-boxes, illustrations and a glossary of specialist terms, it provides students with the background narrative and core concepts necessary to engage with specialist historians such as Adrian Desmond, Bernard Lightman and James Secord. Conlin skilfully synthesises material from a range of sources to show the ways in which the discovery of evolution was a collaborative enterprise pursued in all areas of Victorian society, including many that do not at first appear "scientific".

Evolution and Victorian Culture

Author : Bernard V. Lightman,Bennett Zon
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 320 pages
File Size : 51,8 Mb
Release : 2014
Category : Culture
ISBN : 1316008347

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Evolution and Victorian Culture by Bernard V. Lightman,Bennett Zon Pdf

Examines the dynamic interplay between evolution and Victorian culture, mapping new relationships between the arts and sciences.

Evolutionary Theory and Victorian Culture

Author : Martin Fichman
Publisher : Amherst, N.Y. : Humanity Books
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 46,7 Mb
Release : 2002
Category : History
ISBN : UOM:39015056184008

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Evolutionary Theory and Victorian Culture by Martin Fichman Pdf

This absorbing study of the Victorian controversies over the cultural meaning of evolution broadens our perspective by discussing the roles played by prominent individuals besides Charles Darwin, notably Alfred Russel Wallace, Herbert Spencer, and Thomas Henry Huxley. Fichman traces the emergence of science as a definitive political and cultural force in this critical period, showing that evolutionary biology was at the epicenter of these profound sociocultural transformations. His astute analysis of the often vehement Victorian debates on the political, religious, racial, and ethical implications of evolutionary thought reveals how science came to be inseparable from the broader culture. He also relates 19th-century controversies to cultural debates in the 20th century, in particular the notorious Scopes trial (1925) and the later, and ongoing, debate about "scientific creationism." For all those fascinated, and perplexed, by the impact of evolutionary theory on our worldview, and the increasingly close ties between science and Western culture, Fichman's historical perspective lends much clarity and context to current controversies.

Victorian Science and Imagery

Author : Nancy Rose Marshall
Publisher : University of Pittsburgh Press
Page : 338 pages
File Size : 40,6 Mb
Release : 2021-07-27
Category : Science
ISBN : 9780822987994

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Victorian Science and Imagery by Nancy Rose Marshall Pdf

The nineteenth century was a period of science and imagery: when scientific theories and discoveries challenged longstanding boundaries between animal, plant, and human, and when art and visual culture produced new notions about the place of the human in the natural world. Just as scientists relied on graphic representation to conceptualize their ideas, artists moved seamlessly between scientific debate and creative expression to support or contradict popular scientific theories—such as Darwin’s theory of evolution and sexual selection—deliberately drawing on concepts in ways that allowed them to refute popular claims or disrupt conventional knowledges. Focusing on the close kinship between the arts and sciences during the Victorian period, the art historians contributing to this volume reveal the unique ways in which nineteenth-century British and American visual culture participated in making science, and in which science informed art at a crucial moment in the history of the development of the modern world. Together, they explore topics in geology, meteorology, medicine, anatomy, evolution, and zoology, as well as a range of media from photography to oil painting. They remind us that science and art are not tightly compartmentalized, separate influences. Rather, these are fields that share forms, manifest as waves, layers, lines, or geometries; that invest in the idea of the evolution of form; and that generate surprisingly kindred responses, such as pain, pleasure, empathy, and sympathy.

Evolutionary Theory and Victorian Culture

Author : Martin Fichman
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 128 pages
File Size : 41,9 Mb
Release : 2007
Category : Evolution
ISBN : OCLC:1012144428

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Evolutionary Theory and Victorian Culture by Martin Fichman Pdf

Evolution and Victorian Musical Culture

Author : Bennett Zon
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 377 pages
File Size : 41,5 Mb
Release : 2017-10-12
Category : History
ISBN : 9781107020443

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Evolution and Victorian Musical Culture by Bennett Zon Pdf

Explores the musical background to Darwinism and the development of the relationship between science and the arts in Victorian Britain.

Evolution and Imagination in Victorian Children's Literature

Author : Jessica Straley
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 271 pages
File Size : 53,6 Mb
Release : 2016-06-06
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781107127524

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Evolution and Imagination in Victorian Children's Literature by Jessica Straley Pdf

An interdisciplinary study that explores the impact of evolutionary theory on Victorian children's literature.

Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines

Author : Bernard Lightman,Bennett Zon
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 343 pages
File Size : 43,5 Mb
Release : 2019-06-20
Category : Literary Collections
ISBN : 9781000124170

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Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines by Bernard Lightman,Bennett Zon Pdf

Current studies in disciplinarity range widely across philosophical and literary contexts, producing heated debate and entrenched divergences. Yet, despite their manifest significance for us today seldom have those studies engaged with the Victorian origins of modern disciplinarity. Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines adds a crucial missing link in that history by asking and answering a series of deceptively simple questions: how did Victorians define a discipline; what factors impinged upon that definition; and how did they respond to disciplinary understanding? Structured around sections on professionalization, university curriculums, society journals, literary genres and interdisciplinarity, Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines addresses the tangled bank of disciplinarity in the arts, humanities, social sciences and natural sciences including musicology, dance, literature, and art history; classics, history, archaeology, and theology; anthropology, psychology; and biology, mathematics and physics. Chapters examine the generative forces driving disciplinary formation, and gauge its success or failure against social, cultural, political, and economic environmental pressures. No other volume has focused specifically on the origin of Victorian disciplines in order to track the birth, death, and growth of the units into which knowledge was divided in this period, and no other volume has placed such a wide array of Victorian disciplines in their cultural context.

An Elusive Victorian

Author : Martin Fichman
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Page : 393 pages
File Size : 48,7 Mb
Release : 2010-11-15
Category : Science
ISBN : 9780226246154

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An Elusive Victorian by Martin Fichman Pdf

Codiscoverer of the theory of evolution by natural selection, Alfred Russel Wallace should be recognized as one of the titans of Victorian science. Instead he has long been relegated to a secondary place behind Darwin. Worse, many scholars have overlooked or even mocked his significant contributions to other aspects of Victorian culture. With An Elusive Victorian, Martin Fichman provides the first comprehensive analytical study of Wallace's life and controversial intellectual career. Fichman examines not only Wallace's scientific work as an evolutionary theorist and field naturalist but also his philosophical concerns, his involvement with theism, and his commitment to land nationalization and other sociopolitical reforms such as women's rights. As Fichman shows, Wallace worked throughout his life to integrate these humanistic and scientific interests. His goal: the development of an evolutionary cosmology, a unified vision of humanity's place in nature and society that he hoped would ensure the dignity of all individuals. To reveal the many aspects of this compelling figure, Fichman not only reexamines Wallace's published works, but also probes the contents of his lesser known writings, unpublished correspondence, and copious annotations in books from his personal library. Rather than consider Wallace's science as distinct from his sociopolitical commitments, An Elusive Victorian assumes a mutually beneficial relationship between the two, one which shaped Wallace into one of the most memorable characters of his time. Fully situating Wallace's wide-ranging work in its historical and cultural context, Fichman's innovative and insightful account will interest historians of science, religion, and Victorian culture as well as biologists.

Human Evolution and Fantastic Victorian Fiction

Author : Anna Neill
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 246 pages
File Size : 52,6 Mb
Release : 2021-06-24
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781000392722

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Human Evolution and Fantastic Victorian Fiction by Anna Neill Pdf

Following the publication of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, Victorian anthropology made two apparently contradictory claims: it distinguished "civilized man" from animals and "primitive" humans and it linked them though descent. Paradoxically, it was by placing human history in a deep past shaped by minute, incremental changes (rather than at the apex of Providential order) that evolutionary anthropology could assert a new form of human exceptionalism and define civilized humanity against both human and nonhuman savagery. This book shows how fantastic Victorian and early Edwardian fictions—utopias, dystopias, nonsense literature, gothic horror, and children’s fables—untether human and nonhuman animal agency from this increasingly orthodox account of the deep past. As they imagine worlds that lift the evolutionary constraints on development and as they collapse evolution into lived time, these stories reveal (and even occupy) dynamic landscapes of cognitive descent that contest prevailing anthropological ideas about race, culture, and species difference.

The Control of Nature

Author : John McPhee
Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 47,7 Mb
Release : 2011-04-01
Category : Nature
ISBN : 9780374708498

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The Control of Nature by John McPhee Pdf

While John McPhee was working on his previous book, Rising from the Plains, he happened to walk by the engineering building at the University of Wyoming, where words etched in limestone said: "Strive on--the control of Nature is won, not given." In the morning sunlight, that central phrase--"the control of nature"--seemed to sparkle with unintended ambiguity. Bilateral, symmetrical, it could with equal speed travel in opposite directions. For some years, he had been planning a book about places in the world where people have been engaged in all-out battles with nature, about (in the words of the book itself) "any struggle against natural forces--heroic or venal, rash or well advised--when human beings conscript themselves to fight against the earth, to take what is not given, to rout the destroying enemy, to surround the base of Mt. Olympus demanding and expecting the surrender of the gods." His interest had first been sparked when he went into the Atchafalaya--the largest river swamp in North America--and had learned that virtually all of its waters were metered and rationed by a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' project called Old River Control. In the natural cycles of the Mississippi's deltaic plain, the time had come for the Mississippi to change course, to shift its mouth more than a hundred miles and go down the Atchafalaya, one of its distributary branches. The United States could not afford that--for New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and all the industries that lie between would be cut off from river commerce with the rest of the nation. At a place called Old River, the Corps therefore had built a great fortress--part dam, part valve--to restrain the flow of the Atchafalaya and compel the Mississippi to stay where it is. In Iceland, in 1973, an island split open without warning and huge volumes of lava began moving in the direction of a harbor scarcely half a mile away. It was not only Iceland's premier fishing port (accounting for a large percentage of Iceland's export economy) but it was also the only harbor along the nation's southern coast. As the lava threatened to fill the harbor and wipe it out, a physicist named Thorbjorn Sigurgeirsson suggested a way to fight against the flowing red rock--initiating an all-out endeavor unique in human history. On the big island of Hawaii, one of the world's two must eruptive hot spots, people are not unmindful of the Icelandic example. McPhee went to Hawaii to talk with them and to walk beside the edges of a molten lake and incandescent rivers. Some of the more expensive real estate in Los Angeles is up against mountains that are rising and disintegrating as rapidly as any in the world. After a complex coincidence of natural events, boulders will flow out of these mountains like fish eggs, mixed with mud, sand, and smaller rocks in a cascading mass known as debris flow. Plucking up trees and cars, bursting through doors and windows, filling up houses to their eaves, debris flows threaten the lives of people living in and near Los Angeles' famous canyons. At extraordinary expense the city has built a hundred and fifty stadium-like basins in a daring effort to catch the debris. Taking us deep into these contested territories, McPhee details the strategies and tactics through which people attempt to control nature. Most striking in his vivid depiction of the main contestants: nature in complex and awesome guises, and those who would attempt to wrest control from her--stubborn, often ingenious, and always arresting characters.

Darwin's Metaphor

Author : Robert M. Young
Publisher : Unknown
Page : 341 pages
File Size : 44,7 Mb
Release : 1985
Category : Science
ISBN : 0521317428

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Darwin's Metaphor by Robert M. Young Pdf

In this collection of closely interrelated essays, Robert Young emphasizes the scope of the nineteenth-century debate on 'man's place in nature' at the same time as he engages with the approaches of scholars who write about it. He is critical of the separation of the writing of history from writing about history, historiography, and of the separation of history from politics and ideology, then or now. Dr Young challenges fellow historians for reimposing the very disciplinary boundaries that the nineteenth-century debate showed were in the service of ideological forces in that culture. Rather, he proposes that the full weight of the contending forces should be made apparent and debated openly so that neither nineteenth-century nor current issues about the role of science in culture should be treated in a narrow perspective.

Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture

Author : Jonathan Smith
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 23 pages
File Size : 41,5 Mb
Release : 2006-07-06
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 9780521856904

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Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture by Jonathan Smith Pdf

A highly illustrated account of Darwin's visual representations of his theories, and their influence on Victorian literature, art and culture, first published in 2006.

The Evolutionary Imagination in Late-Victorian Novels

Author : John Glendening
Publisher : Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.
Page : 254 pages
File Size : 41,6 Mb
Release : 2007-01-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 075465821X

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The Evolutionary Imagination in Late-Victorian Novels by John Glendening Pdf

Dominated by Darwinism and its numerous guises, evolutionary theory presented opportunities and difficulties for late Victorian novelists. John Glendening shows how a range of texts, from The Island of Doctor Moreau and Dracula to Heart of Darkness, address the interrelationship between order and chaos uncovered by evolutionary thinking. His focus is on how these authors stressed, not objective truths, but rather the contingencies and confusions generated by theories of evolution.