Geographies of city science : urban life and origin debates in late Victorian Dublin

Author(s)

    • O'Sullivan, Tanya

Bibliographic Information

Geographies of city science : urban life and origin debates in late Victorian Dublin

Tanya O'Sullivan

(Science and culture in the nineteenth century)

University of Pittsburgh Press, c2019

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-228) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Dublin at the turn of the twentieth century was both the second city of the British Empire and the soon-to-be capital of an emerging nation, presenting a unique space in which to examine the past relationship between science and the city. Drawing on both geography and biography, Geographies of City Science underscores the crucial role urban spaces played in the production of scientific knowledge. Each chapter explores the lives of two practitioners from one of the main religious and political traditions in Dublin (either Protestant and Unionist or Catholic and Nationalist). As Tanya O'Sullivan argues, any variation in their engagement with science had far less to do with their affiliations than with their "life spaces"-domains where human agency and social structures collide. Focusing on nineteenth-century debates on the origins of the universe as well as the origins of form, humans, and language, O'Sullivan explores the numerous ways in which scientific meaning relating to origin theories was established and mobilized in the city. By foregrounding Dublin, her book complements more recent attempts to enrich the historiography of metropolitan science by examining its provenance in less well-known urban centers.

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