Space and the 'March of Mind' by Alice Jenkins, Hardcover, 9780199209927 | Buy online at The Nile
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Space and the 'March of Mind'

Literature and the Physical Sciences in Britain 1815-1850

Author: Alice Jenkins  

This book is about the idea of space in the nineteenth century. It uses contemporary poetry, essays, and fiction as well as scientific papers, textbooks, and journalism to examine literature's relationship with science. In particular it brings the physical sciences more accessibly and fully into the arena of literary criticism than ever before.

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Summary

This book is about the idea of space in the nineteenth century. It uses contemporary poetry, essays, and fiction as well as scientific papers, textbooks, and journalism to examine literature's relationship with science. In particular it brings the physical sciences more accessibly and fully into the arena of literary criticism than ever before.

Read more

Description

This book is about the idea of space in the first half of the nineteenth century. It uses contemporary poetry, essays, and fiction as well as scientific papers, textbooks, and journalism to give a new account of nineteenth-century literature's relationship with science. In particular it brings the physical sciences - physics and chemistry - more accessibly and fully into the arena of literary criticism than has been the case until now.Writerswhose work is discussed in this book include many who will be familiar to a literary audience (including Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Hazlitt), some well-known in the history of science (includingFaraday, Herschel, and Whewell), and a raft of lesser-known figures. Alice Jenkins draws a new map of the interactions between literature and science in the first half of the nineteenth century, showing how both disciplines were wrestling with the same central political and intellectual concerns - regulating access to knowledge, organising knowledge in productive ways, and formulating the relationships of old and new knowledges.Space has become a subject of enormouscritical interest in literary and cultural studies. Space and the 'March of Mind' gives a wide-ranging account of how early nineteenth-century writers thought about - and thought with - space. Burgeoningmass access to print culture combined with rapid scientific development to create a crisis in managing knowledge. Contemporary writers tried to solve this crisis by rethinking the nature of space. Writers in all genres and disciplines, from all points on the political spectrum, returned again and again to ideas and images of space when they needed to set up or dismantle boundaries in the intellectual realm, and when they wanted to talk about what kinds of knowledge certain groups of readerswanted, needed, or deserved. This book provides a rich new picture of the early nineteenth century's understanding of its own culture.

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Critic Reviews

“"An estimable book."-Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 "An impressive range of historical data...Thanks to this pathbreaking study, we can almost certainly expect to see further analyses of so-called "hard sciences" in relation to literary history."--Philological Quarterly”

Alice Jenkins' ambitious study of British literary and scientific culture in the nineteenth century breaks new ground... She moves effortlessly between science and literature. An erudite study with many fresh insights, Space and the 'March of Mind' is an important addition to the scholarship on nineteenth-century science and literature Bernard Lightman, BSLS
a fascinating book BARS Bulletin and Review

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About the Author

Alice Jenkins is a lecturer in the Department of English Literature at the University of Glasgow. Her research interests are mainly in nineteenth-century literature and science. She is the co-editor with Juliet John of Rereading Victorian Fiction (Macmillan, 2000 and 2002) and Rethinking Victorian Culture (Macmillan, 2000) and of The Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins: A Literary Sourcebook (Routledge, 2006). She has published articles andessays on Michael Faraday, Mary Somerville, and various aspects of the cultural life of Victorian science, and others on twentieth-century fantasy writing. She is the co-founder of the British Society for Literature and Science.

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More on this Book

This book is about the idea of space in the first half of the nineteenth century. It uses contemporary poetry, essays, and fiction as well as scientific papers, textbooks, and journalism to give a new account of nineteenth-century literature's relationship with science. In particular it brings the physical sciences - physics and chemistry - more accessibly and fully into the arena of literary criticism than has been the case until now.Writers whose work is discussed in this book include many who will be familiar to a literary audience (including Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Hazlitt), some well-known in the history of science (including Faraday, Herschel, and Whewell), and a raft of lesser-known figures. Alice Jenkins draws a new map of the interactions between literature and science in the first half of the nineteenth century, showing how both disciplines were wrestling with the same central political and intellectual concerns - regulating access to knowledge, organising knowledge in productive ways, and formulating the relationships of old and new knowledges.Space has become a subject of enormous critical interest in literary and cultural studies. Space and the 'March of Mind' gives a wide-ranging account of how early nineteenth-century writers thought about - and thought with - space. Burgeoning mass access to print culture combined with rapid scientific development to create a crisis in managing knowledge. Contemporary writers tried to solve this crisis by rethinking the nature of space. Writers in all genres and disciplines, from all points on the political spectrum, returned again and again to ideas and images of space when they needed to set up or dismantle boundaries in the intellectual realm, and when they wanted to talk about what kinds of knowledge certain groups of readers wanted, needed, or deserved. This book provides a rich new picture of the early nineteenth century's understanding of its own culture.

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Product Details

Publisher
Oxford University Press
Published
18th January 2007
Pages
272
ISBN
9780199209927

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