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Darwinisms Generations The Reception Of Darwinian Evolution In Britain 18591909 Martin Hewitt

  • SKU: BELL-175024630
Darwinisms Generations The Reception Of Darwinian Evolution In Britain 18591909 Martin Hewitt
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Darwinisms Generations The Reception Of Darwinian Evolution In Britain 18591909 Martin Hewitt instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 2.55 MB
Pages: 576
Author: Martin Hewitt
ISBN: 9780192890993, 0192890999
Language: English
Year: 2024

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Darwinisms Generations The Reception Of Darwinian Evolution In Britain 18591909 Martin Hewitt by Martin Hewitt 9780192890993, 0192890999 instant download after payment.

- Offers a readers' eye perspective of the history of Darwinian biology.- Deploys a new method, 'extensive reading', which draws on the responses of over 2,000 Victorians.- Presents and justifies a new generational schema for Victorian Britain.The Reception of Darwinian Evolution in Britain, 1859-1909: Darwinism's Generations uses the impact of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species (1859) in the 50 years after its publication to demonstrate the effectiveness of a generational framework for understanding the cultural and intellectual history of Britain in the nineteenth century. It challenges conventional notions of the 'Darwinian Revolution' by examining how people from across all sections of society actually responded to Darwin's writings. Drawing on the opinions and interventions of over 2,000 Victorians, drawn from an exceptionally wide range of archival and printed sources, it argues that the spread of Darwinian belief was slower, more complicated, more stratified by age, and ultimately shaped far more powerfully by divergent generational responses, than has previously been recognised. In doing so, it makes a number of important contributions. It offers by far the richest and most comprehensive account to date of how contemporaries came to terms with the intellectual and emotional shocks of evolutionary theory. It makes a compelling case for taking proper account of age as a fundamental historical dynamic, and for the powerful generational patternings of the effects that age produced. It demonstrates the extent to which the most common sub-periodisation of the Victorian period are best understood not merely as constituted by the exigencies of events, but are also formed by the shifting balance generational influence.

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