Results for ' Victorian Studies'

988 found
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  1.  8
    The Victorians and the Visual Imagination.Kate Flint & Reader in Victorian and Modern English Literature and Fellow Kate Flint - 2000 - Cambridge University Press.
    Richly illustrated study drawing on art, literature and science to explore Victorian attitudes towards sight.
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  2. John Borneman. Syrian Episodes: Sons, Fathers, and an Anthropologist in Aleppo (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007), xxix+ 236 pp. $27.95/£ 17.95 cloth. Amine Bouchentouf. Commodities for Dummies (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Publishing, 2007), xx+ 360 pp.£ 16.99 paper. Kelly Boyd and Rohan McWilliam. The Victorian Studies Reader (London: Routledge. [REVIEW]Mireia Aragay, Hildegard Klein, Enric Monforte & Pilar Zozaya - 2008 - The European Legacy 13 (3):397-399.
  3.  47
    Victorian physics meets industrial capitalism: Crosbie Smith and M. Norton Wise: Energy and empire: A biographical study of Lord Kelvin, 2 volume set. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009, 892pp, £43.00 PB.Bruce J. Hunt - 2011 - Metascience 21 (1):119-124.
    Victorian physics meets industrial capitalism Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-6 DOI 10.1007/s11016-011-9554-0 Authors Bruce J. Hunt, History Department, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station B7000, Austin, TX 78712-0220, USA Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  4. Mid-Victorian employees and the taxman: A study in information gathering by the state in 1860.Colley Robert - 2001 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 21 (4).
     
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  5. The Victorian Sage, Studies in Argument.John Holloway - 1954 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 16 (2):356-357.
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  6.  16
    The Victorian Sage. Studies in Argument.T. M. Knox & John Holloway - 1953 - Philosophical Quarterly 3 (13):382.
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  7.  14
    Reforming Philosophy: A Victorian Debate on Science and Society.Laura J. Snyder - 2006 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    The Victorian period in Britain was an “age of reform.” It is therefore not surprising that two of the era’s most eminent intellects described themselves as reformers. Both William Whewell and John Stuart Mill believed that by reforming philosophy—including the philosophy of science—they could effect social and political change. But their divergent visions of this societal transformation led to a sustained and spirited controversy that covered morality, politics, science, and economics. Situating their debate within the larger context of (...) society and its concerns, _Reforming Philosophy_ shows how two very different men captured the intellectual spirit of the day and engaged the attention of other scientists and philosophers, including the young Charles Darwin. Mill—philosopher, political economist, and Parliamentarian—remains a canonical author of Anglo-American philosophy, while Whewell—Anglican cleric, scientist, and educator—is now often overlooked, though in his day he was renowned as an authority on science. Placing their teachings in their proper intellectual, cultural, and argumentative spheres, Laura Snyder revises the standard views of these two important Victorian figures, showing that both men’s concerns remain relevant today. A philosophically and historically sensitive account of the engagement of the major protagonists of Victorian British philosophy, _Reforming Philosophy_ is the first book-length examination of the dispute between Mill and Whewell in its entirety. A rich and nuanced understanding of the intellectual spirit of Victorian Britain, it will be welcomed by philosophers and historians of science, scholars of Victorian studies, and students of the history of philosophy and political economy. (shrink)
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  8.  8
    Mid‐Victorian Employees and the Taxman: A Study in Information Gathering by the State in 1860.Robert Colley - 2001 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 21 (4):593-608.
    Government's attempts to coerce the production of information from employers of labour in order to verify the income tax returns of their employees was one of the symbols of the growing reality of state intervention in the mid‐19th century. The resistance from politically influential industrialists and manufacturers which this engendered arose ostensibly from fears of a system of state surveillance and commercial espionage, in which employers were required to inform on their workforce and in which employees might retaliate by informing (...)
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  9. Victorians and Africans: The Genealogy of the Myth of the Dark Continent.Patrick Brantlinger - 1985 - Critical Inquiry 12 (1):166-203.
    Paradoxically, abolitionism contained the seeds of empire. If we accept the general outline of Eric Williams’ thesis in Capitalism and Slavery that abolition was not purely altruistic but was as economically conditioned as Britain’s later empire building in Africa, the contradiction between the ideologies of antislavery and imperialism seems more apparent than real. Although the idealism that motivated the great abolitionists such as William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson is unquestionable, Williams argues that Britain could afford to legislate against the slave (...)
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  10. Anglican Attitudes. A Study of Victorian Religious Controversies.A. O. J. Cockshut - 1959
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  11.  47
    Reforming philosophy: a Victorian debate on science and society.Laura J. Snyder - 2006 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    A philosophically and historically sensitive account of the engagement of the major protagonists of Victorian British philosophy, Reforming Philosophy considers the controversies between William Whewell and John Stuart Mill on the topics of science, morality, politics, and economics. By situating their debate within the larger context of Victorian society and its concerns, Laura Snyder shows how two very different men—Whewell, an educator, Anglican priest, and critic of science; and Mill, a philosopher, political economist, and parliamentarian—reacted to the challenges (...)
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  12.  28
    Victorian modernism: pragmatism and the varieties of aesthetic experience.Jessica R. Feldman - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Victorian Modernism: Pragmatism and the Varieties of Aesthetic Experience Jessica Feldman sheds a pragmatist light on the relation between the Victorian age and Modernism by dislodging truistic notions of Modernism as an art of crisis, rupture, elitism and loss. She examines aesthetic sites of Victorian Modernism - including workrooms, parlours, friendships, and family relations as well as printed texts and paintings - as they develop through interminglings and continuities as well as gaps and breaks. Examining the (...)
  13.  14
    Play up and play the game: Victorian and Edwardian public school vocabularies of motive.J. A. Mangan - 1975 - British Journal of Educational Studies 23 (3):324-335.
  14.  27
    The Imprisoned Splendor: a Study in [Early] Victorian Critical Theory (review).R. K. R. Thornton - 1978 - Philosophy and Literature 2 (1):136-137.
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  15.  22
    Disability Studies and the Victorians. [REVIEW]Lennard J. Davis - 2001 - Hastings Center Report 31 (6):44.
  16.  6
    Studies in the Reception of Plato and Greek Political Thought in Victorian Britain. [REVIEW]Jay Bregman - 2012 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 6 (2):247-249.
  17.  10
    Victorian quasi‐public schools: A question of appearance and reality or an application of the principle of the survival of the fittest?D. Leinster-Mackay - 1981 - British Journal of Educational Studies 29 (1):54 - 68.
    (1981). Victorian quasi‐public schools: A question of appearance and reality or an application of the principle of the survival of the fittest? British Journal of Educational Studies: Vol. 29, No. 1, pp. 54-68.
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  18.  9
    Scottish philosophy and British physics, 1750-1880: a study in the foundations of the Victorian scientific style.Richard Olson - 1975 - Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
    Historians of science have long been intrigued by the impact of disparate cultural styles on the science of a given country and time period. Richard Olson’s book is a case study in the interaction between philosophy and science as well as an examination of a particular scientific movement. The author investigates the methodological arguments of the Common Sense philosophers Thomas Reid, Dugald Stewart, Thomas Brown, and William Hamilton and the possible transmission of their ideas to scientists from John Playfair to (...)
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  19.  69
    Freud and the Culture of Psychoanalysis : Studies in the Transition From Victorian Humanism to Modernity.Steven Marcus - 2016 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1984, this book broke new ground in assessing Freud as both an exemplary late-Victorian and as a pivotal figure in the creation of modern thought and culture. In his close reading of various of Freud’s theoretical and clinical texts, including two of the most famous case histories, Steven Marcus uncovers the steps in the development of Freud’s thought, the dynamics and contradictions and ‘the intellectual and emotional urgings, forces and conflicts that were at work… as the (...)
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  20.  16
    A Calculating Profession: Victorian Actuaries among the Statisticians.Timothy L. Alborn - 1994 - Science in Context 7 (3):433-468.
    The ArgumentHistorians of science naturally tend to express interest in other forms of intellectual activity only when these intersect with science. This tendncy has produced a number of enlightening studies of what happens when science and (for instance) law or theology come into contact, but little by way of how science enters into the calculations and social status of such forms of knowledge after the conjuction has passed. Recent work in the sociology of professions, in contrast, has focused attention (...)
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  21.  42
    Anglican Attitudes. A Study of Victorian Religious Controversies.J. D. Bastable - 1959 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 9:156-162.
    The Church of England By Law Established, in incidental payment for secular privilege, has submitted to the bonds of established clichá, in particular to the reproach that its rulers seem more concerned with the external or practical working of Anglican faith and ritual than with their intellectual definition and justification. This intellectual looseness remained unimportant in practice as long as a forceful anti–Roman spirit blew all waves of opinion in one practical direction. In time, however, that wind gradually lost force (...)
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  22.  35
    Catholicism, sexual deviance, and Victorian gothic culture (cambridge studies in nineteenth-century literature and culture 51). By Patrick R. O'Malley.Anthony Chennells - 2007 - Heythrop Journal 48 (5):816–818.
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  23.  6
    British idealism, and social explanation: a study in late Victorian thought.Sandra M. Den Otter - 1996 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Idealism became the dominant philosphical school of thought in late nineteenth-century Britain. In this original and stimulating study, Sandra den Otter examines its roots in Greek and German thinking and locates it among the prevalent methodologies and theories of the period: empiricism and positivism, naturalism, evolution, and utilitarianism. In particular, she sets it in the context of the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century debate about a science of society and the contemporary preoccupation with `community'.
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  24.  27
    The Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental Pilgrimage (review).Roger Corless - 2004 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 24 (1):276-278.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental PilgrimageRoger CorlessThe Victorian Translation of China: James Legge's Oriental Pilgrimage. By Norman J.Girardot. Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press, 2002. xxx + 780 pp.Don't make the mistake I made and allow the size of this book intimidate you. I let it sit around for many months, fearing, as did the author, to "[row] out over the (...)
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  25.  54
    Distributed Cognition in Victorian Culture and Modernism.Miranda Anderson, Peter Garratt & Mark Sprevak (eds.) - 2020 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Reinvigorates our understanding of Victorian and modernist works and society Offers a wide-ranging application of theories of distributed cognition to Victorian culture and Modernism Explores the distinctive nature and expression of notions of distributed cognition in Victorian culture and Modernism and considers their relation to current notions Reinvigorates our understanding of Western European works – including Wordsworth, T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf – and society by bringing to bear recent insights on the distributed nature of cognition (...)
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  26.  8
    British Idealism and Social Explanation: A Study in Late Victorian Thought.Sandra M. Den Otter - 1996 - New York: Clarendon Press.
    In this original and stimulating study of Idealism, the dominant philosophical school of thought in late nineteenth-century Britain, Sandra den Otter interweaves philosophical and sociological concerns to make an important contribution to intellectual history.
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  27.  32
    Victorian Feminists.Barbara Caine - 1993 - Clarendon Press.
    Featuring the biographies of leading feminists of the era - Emily Davies, Frances Power Cobbe, Josephine Butler and Millicent Garrett Fawcett - this study explores feminist ideas and strategies of the late 19th century, analyzing the tensions which arose as feminism sought to achieve its aims.
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  28.  32
    Evolution and Ethics: T.H. Huxley's Evolution and Ethics with New Essays on its Victorian and Sociobiological Context.James G. Paradis & George Christopher Williams - 1989 - Princeton University Press.
    T. H. Huxley (1825-1895) was not only an active protagonist in the religious and scientific upheaval that followed the publication of Darwin's theory of evolution but also a harbinger of the sociobiological debates about the implications of evolution that are now going on. His seminal lecture Evolution and Ethics, reprinted here with its introductory Prolegomena, argues that the human psyche is at war with itself, that humans are alienated in a cosmos that has no special reference to their needs, and (...)
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  29.  7
    Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture.Jonathan Smith - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    Although The Origin of Species contained just a single visual illustration, Charles Darwin's other books, from his monograph on barnacles in the early 1850s to his volume on earthworms in 1881, were copiously illustrated by well-known artists and engravers. In this 2006 book, Jonathan Smith explains how Darwin managed to illustrate the unillustratable - his theories of natural selection - by manipulating and modifying the visual conventions of natural history, using images to support the claims made in his texts. Moreover, (...)
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  30.  22
    Reading Ideas in Victorian Literature: Literary Content as Artistic Experience.Rafe McGregor - 2022 - British Journal of Aesthetics 62 (4):708-711.
    Patrick Fessenbecker is Assistant Professor in Cultures, Civilizations, and Ideas at Bilkent University in Ankara. Reading Ideas in Victorian Literature is his first monograph and constitutes a substantial development of the argument he introduced in ‘In Defense of Paraphrase’, the essay that won New Literary History’s Ralph W. Cohen Prize in 2013. The purpose of the book is twofold: to problematize the formalist approach that has achieved hegemony in contemporary literary studies and to offer an alternative way of (...)
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  31.  25
    Possessed Victorians: Extra Spheres in Nineteenth-Century Mystical Writing. By Sarah A. Willburn.Heather Wolffram - 2008 - The European Legacy 13 (6):795-796.
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  32. Exploration and exploitation of Victorian science in Darwin’s reading notebooks.Jaimie Murdock, Colin Allen & Simon DeDeo - 2017 - Cognition 159 (C):117-126.
    Search in an environment with an uncertain distribution of resources involves a trade-off between exploitation of past discoveries and further exploration. This extends to information foraging, where a knowledge-seeker shifts between reading in depth and studying new domains. To study this decision-making process, we examine the reading choices made by one of the most celebrated scientists of the modern era: Charles Darwin. From the full-text of books listed in his chronologically-organized reading journals, we generate topic models to quantify his local (...)
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  33.  69
    Victorian Fantasy, by Stephen Prickett.Heather Raff - 2005 - The Chesterton Review 31 (3/4):254-255.
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  34.  8
    A Victorian Class Conflict? Schoolteaching and the Parson, Priest and Minister, 1837-1902. [REVIEW]Paul Wakeling - 2010 - British Journal of Educational Studies 58 (2):231-248.
  35. The Triumph of Time: A Study of the Victorian Concepts of Time, History, Progress, and Decadence.J. H. Buckley - 1966
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  36.  57
    Kyriakos Demetriou, Studies in the Reception of Plato and Greek Political Thought in Victorian Britain. Ashgate Variorum, 2011. ISBN 9781409420514. [REVIEW]Jay Bregman - 2012 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 6 (2):247-249.
    This article is currently available as a free download on ingentaconnect.
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  37.  78
    Sidgwick's ethics and Victorian moral philosophy.Jerome B. Schneewind - 1977 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Henry Sedgewick's The Methods of Ethics challenges comparison, as no other work in moral philosophy, with Aristotle's Ethics in the depth of its understanding of practical rationality, and in its architectural coherence it rivals the work of Kant. In this historical, rather than critical study, Professor Schneewind shows how Sidgewick's arguments and conclusions represent rational developments of the work of Sidgewick's predecessors, and brings out the nature and structure of the reasoning underlying his position.
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  38.  4
    Victorian America.Michael V. Belok - 1978 - Educational Studies 9 (2):173-181.
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  39.  7
    A Victorian experiment in international education: The college at spring grove.Cyril Bibby - 1956 - British Journal of Educational Studies 5 (1):25-36.
  40.  28
    The triumph of wit: a study of Victorian comic theory.Robert Bernard Martin - 1974 - Oxford: Clarendon Press.
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  41.  8
    David B. Wilson, Kelvin and Stokes: A comparative study in Victorian Physics.Jacques Mathieu - 1990 - Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 43 (4):499-499.
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  42. Between scepticism and credulity: a study of Victorian scientific attitudes to modern spiritualism.Jon Palfreman - 1979 - In Roy Wallis (ed.), On the margins of science: the social construction of rejected knowledge. Keele: University of Keele. pp. 201--236.
     
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  43.  14
    Kelvin and Stokes: A Comparative Study in Victorian Physics. David B. Wilson.M. Norton Wise - 1989 - Isis 80 (4):712-713.
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  44. The French Lieutenant's Woman & the Victorian Era.Subhasis Chattopadhyay - manuscript
    This is made open access for students worldwide. The bulleted points deal with Fowles' engagement with Victorian morals. This draft which will not be published shows how this novel is not a historical novel, though it portrays historical facts. This is for self-study during this ongoing COVID 19 pandemic. Students are advised to follow the hyperlinks embedded within the body of the text. This is a non-plagiarised paper to serve the needs of intermediate students.
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  45.  9
    Adult education and the Cornish Miner: A study in Victorian initiative.Patrick Keane - 1974 - British Journal of Educational Studies 22 (3):261-291.
  46.  14
    Men versus the state: Herbert Spencer and late Victorian individualism.Michael Taylor - 1992 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    A study of the political philosophy of Herbert Spencer, this book examines the thought of the man considered by many to be the greatest philosopher of Victorian Britain, and the ideas of the Individualists, a group of political thinkers inspired by him to uphold the policy of laissez-faire during the 1880s and 1890s. Despite their important contribution to nineteenth-century political debate, these thinkers have been neglected by historians, who Taylor argues have concentrated instead on the advocates of an enhanced (...)
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  47.  23
    The invention of altruism: making moral meanings in Victorian Britain.Thomas Dixon - 2008 - New York: Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press.
    'Altruism' was coined by the French sociologist Auguste Comte in the early 1850s as a theoretical term in his 'cerebral theory' and as the central ideal of his atheistic 'Religion of Humanity'. In The Invention of Altruism, Thomas Dixon traces this new language of 'altruism' as it spread through British culture between the 1850s and the 1900s, and in doing so provides a new portrait of Victorian moral thought. Drawing attention to the importance of Comtean positivism in setting the (...)
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  48.  14
    Holiness in Victorian and Edwardian England: Some ecclesial patterns and theological requisitions.Jason A. Goroncy - 2017 - HTS Theological Studies 73 (4):1-10.
    This essay begins by offering some observations about how holiness was comprehended and expressed in Victorian and Edwardian England. In addition to the 'sensibility' and 'sentiment' that characterised society, notions of holiness were shaped by, and developed in reaction to, dominant philosophical movements; notably, the Enlightenment and Romanticism. It then considers how these notions found varying religious expression in four Protestant traditions - the Oxford Movement, Calvinism, Wesleyanism, and the Early Keswick movement. In juxtaposition to what was most often (...)
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  49.  25
    A Victorian Wanderer: The Life of Thomas Arnold the Younger.Edward J. Enright - 2004 - Newman Studies Journal 1 (2):107-108.
  50.  66
    Beauty and Belief: Aesthetics and Religion in Victorian Literature.Hilary Fraser - 1986 - Cambridge University Press.
    This study is an important contribution to the intellectual history of Victorian England which examines the religio-aesthetic theories of some central writers of the time. Dr Fraser begins with a discussion of the aesthetic dimensions of Tractarian theology and then proceeds to the orthodox certainties of Hopkins' theory of inscape, Ruskin's and Arnold's moralistic criticism of literature and the visual arts, and Pater's and Wilde's faith in a religion of art. The author identifies significant cultural and historical conditions which (...)
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