1st Edition

The Vital Science (Routledge Revivals) Biology and the Literary Imagination,1860-1900

By Peter Morton Copyright 1984
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this title, first published in 1984, Peter Morton argues that in late Victorian Britain a group of novelists and essayists quite consciously sought and found ideas in post-Darwinian biology that were susceptible to imaginative transformation. The period between 1860 and 1900 was a time of great confusion in biology; the natural selection hypothesis was in retreat before its acute critics, and no extension of evolutionary theory to human affairs was too bizarre to attract its quota of enthusiasts. Writers capitalised on this prevailing uncertainty and used it to their own artistic or polemic ends. A fascinating and interdisciplinary title, this reissue will interest students of late Victorian literature, as well as historians of biological theory between The Origin of Species and Mendel.

    Acknowledgements;  Introduction: Definitions and Perspectives;  1. Darwinism on the Deathbed, 1870-1900: The Failings of Natural Selection  2. Victorian Biology and Victorian Letters: An Overview  3. Better, Wiser, and More Beautiful Beings: The Cheerful Doctrine of Evolutionism  4. Laying the Ghost of the Brute: The Fear of Degeneration  5. Remember, Beethoven’s Father was a Drunkard: The Dubious Appeal of Eugenics  6. Nemesis without Her Mask: Heredity before Mendel  7. This Body Is an Omnibus: The Motif of Heredity in The Way of All Flesh and Tess of the d’Urbervilles;  Conclusion;  Bibliography;  Index

    Biography

    Peter Morton