Colonies, cults and evolution : literature, science and culture in nineteenth-century writing

Bibliographic Information

Colonies, cults and evolution : literature, science and culture in nineteenth-century writing

David Amigoni

(Cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture, 59)

Cambridge University Press, 2010

  • : pbk

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Note

Originally published: 2007

Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-233) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The concept of culture, now such an important term within both the arts and the sciences, is a legacy of the nineteenth century. By closely analyzing writings by evolutionary scientists such as Charles Darwin, Alfred Russell Wallace, and Herbert Spencer, alongside those of literary figures including Wordsworth, Coleridge, Arnold, Butler, and Gosse, David Amigoni shows how the modern concept of 'culture' developed out of the interdisciplinary interactions between literature, philosophy, anthropology, colonialism, and, in particular, Darwin's theories of evolution. He goes on to explore the relationship between literature and evolutionary science by arguing that culture was seen less as a singular idea or concept, and more as a field of debate and conflict. This fascinating book includes much material on the history of evolutionary thought and its cultural impact, and will be of interest to scholars of intellectual and scientific history as well as of literature.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: literature, science and the hothouse of culture
  • 1. 'Symbolical of more important things': writing science, religion and colonialism in Coleridge's 'culture'
  • 2. 'Our origin, what matters it?': Wordsworth's excursive portmanteau of culture
  • 3. Charles Darwin's entanglements with stray colonists: cultivation and the species question
  • 4. 'In one another's being mingle': biology and the dissemination of 'culture' after 1859
  • 5. Samuel Butler's symbolic offensives: colonies and mechanical devices in the margins of evolutionary writing
  • 6. Edmund Gosse's cultural evolution: sympathetic magic, imitation, and contagious literature
  • Conclusion: culture's field, culture's vital garment
  • Bibliography.

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