skip to content

Darwin Correspondence Project

Search: contains ""

Darwin Correspondence Project
Search:
societal::status in term disabled_by_default
societal::status in term disabled_by_default
0 Items

Sorry, no results...

Try modifying your search:

 
NB: Searches are not case sensitive and will find both singular and plural of any term
Examples:
floweringfind the word ‘flowering’
flowering plantfind documents containing both ‘flowering’ and ‘plant(s)’
"flowering plant"find the phrase ‘flowering plant(s)’
pl*t find any word beginning ‘pl’ followed by zero or more characters, and ending ‘t’
*plant find any word ending with ‘plant(s)’
plant* find any word beginning ‘plant’
Search:
in keywords
32 Items
Page:  1 2  Next

Exercise: Caricatures of Science

Summary

Caricatures provide intriguing insights into both ideals and transgressions of gender. The following six images show caricatured representations of nineteenth-century men and women of science. They provide insight into the boundaries of what was deemed …

Matches: 2 hits

  • … The images also highlight the complexity of the gendered status of science which, at different …
  • … traits in their character which have gained for them the status of “masculine women”. You have only …

Darwin’s first love

Summary

Darwin’s long marriage to Emma Wedgwood is well documented, but was there an earlier romance in his life? How was his departure on the Beagle entangled with his first love? The answers are revealed in a series of flirtatious letters that Darwin was…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … quite forgotten you—” I doubt not you will find me in  status quo  at the Forest, only grown  old …

Antoinette Brown Blackwell

Summary

Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) was born in Henrietta, New York. In early life she began to preach in her local Congregational Church and went on to teach. Throughout her life she was a renowned public speaker, a vociferous social reformer and…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … that women’s participation in religion could improve their status in society. She was also a keen …

2.1 Thomas Woolner bust

Summary

< Back to Introduction Thomas Woolner’s marble bust of Darwin was the first portrayal of him that reflected an important transition in his status in the later 1860s. In the 1840s–1850s Darwin had been esteemed within scientific circles as one among…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … of him that reflected an important transition in his status in the later 1860s. In the 1840s–1850s …

Interview with Simon Conway Morris

Summary

Simon Conway Morris is professor of evolutionary paleobiology at the University of Cambridge and the author of books on early evolution (The Crucible of Creation, 1998) and evolutionary convergence (Life’s Solution, 2003). He discusses a wide range of…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … of issues, from the evidence of design in nature, to the status of Darwinism in modern biology, to …

4.43 'Illustrated London News' article

Summary

< Back to Introduction In September 1887 the Illustrated London News reviewed G.T. Bettany’s popular biography of Darwin, and the reviewer took this opportunity to offer his own thoughts on the ‘domestic tranquillity’ and ‘unassuming modesty’ of…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … of Darwin in the Natural History Museum, symbolising his status as ‘one of the greatest of …

Letters as a Primary Source

Summary

Introduction: Why study Darwin’s letters? Courses about Darwin usually focus on the Origin of Species, widely regarded as one of the most important books ever written in the history of science. Yet as a starting point for understanding Darwin’s theory,…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … highly compressed nature of its arguments, and its iconic status as a ‘great book’ all make it hard …

Caroline Kennard

Summary

Kennard’s interest in science stemmed from her social commitments to the women's movement, her interests in nature study as a tool for educational reform, as well as her place in a tightly knit network of the Bostonian elite. Kennard was one of a…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … groups focused on reforming education, improving the status of women in society, and promoting …

Science and Religion Interviews

Summary

The importance of Darwin and the nineteenth century debates on science and religion for present day issues and concerns, such as intelligent design, are addressed in series of interviews with leading scientists, philosophers and historians.

Matches: 1 hits

  • … of issues, from the evidence of design in nature, to the status of Darwinism in modern biology, to …

Letters as a Primary Source

Summary

Introduction: Why study Darwin’s letters? Courses about Darwin usually focus on the Origin of Species, widely regarded as one of the most important books ever written in the history of science. Yet as a starting point for understanding Darwin’s theory,…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … highly compressed nature of its arguments, and its iconic status as a ‘great book’ all make it hard …

Interview with John Hedley Brooke

Summary

John Hedley Brooke is President of the Science and Religion Forum as well as the author of the influential Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives (Cambridge University Press, 1991). He has had a long career in the history of science and…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … is whether you could say a bit more about the curious status of spiritualism in the Victorian period …
  • … have to be regarded as somehow having a comparable status to one’s own religious tradition. Now, by …

2.28 Couper bust in Cambridge

Summary

< Back to Introduction In June 1909 the University of Cambridge, Darwin’s alma mater, staged an international event to mark the centenary of his birth and the fifty years’ anniversary of the publication of Origin of Species. Over four hundred…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … for a man only recently dead to be thus raised to the status of the immortals.   In the …

Darwin and ecological science

Summary

The word ‘ecology’ did not exist until 1867, and was not used in an English publication until 1876; Darwin himself never used it, yet it was his work on the complex interactions of organisms and habitats that inspired the word’s creation and he is often…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … the village of Downe were nominated for World Heritage Site status in 2009; the Correspondence …

The Darwin and Gender Project

Summary

The ‘Darwin and Gender’ research and education project, funded by a grant from the Parasol Foundation, ran from 2009 until 2013. Conducted in parallel with a major international research initiative in the history of evolutionary views of human nature, it…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … for both men and women, and the uncertain gendered status of nineteenth-century natural scientists. …

2.7 Joseph Moore, Midland Union medal

Summary

< Back to Introduction The Midland Union was an association of natural history societies and field clubs across the Midland counties, intended to facilitate – especially through its journal The Midland Naturalist – ‘the interchange of ideas’ and…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … the naturalists in the Midland Union, had risen from artisan status through his own determined …

Adam Sedgwick

Summary

One of the early leaders of geology in Britain, Adam Sedgwick  was born in the Yorkshire village of Dent in 1785. Attending Trinity College Cambridge, he was ordained as clergyman and in 1818 was appointed to the Woodwardian Chair of Geology, which offered…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … an unphilosophical speculation which undermined the moral status of humanity.  He read the work …

2.6 Adolf von Hildebrand bust

Summary

< Back to Introduction In 1873, the German biologist Anton Dohrn commissioned a plaster bust of Darwin for the ‘fresco room’ of his new research centre, the Stazione Zoologica in Naples. It was a fitting memorial of a long association between the two…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … Darwin’s public support gave his project credibility and status in the eyes of fellow scientists. …

Darwin and the Church

Summary

The story of Charles Darwin’s involvement with the church is one that is told far too rarely. It shows another side of the man who is more often remembered for his personal struggles with faith, or for his role in large-scale controversies over the…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … church and school finances, and his general concern for the status of the church in the community. …
  • … through the mediation of a clerical agent. Advowsons had the status of private property, a custom …

Correspondence with women

Summary

We know of letters to or from around 2000 correspondents, about 100 of whom were women. Using the letter summaries available on this website, the letters can be assigned to rough categories.  Included in the count are letters to women in Darwin’s family…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … aware of arguments that the generally inferior intellectual status of women was maintained …

Introduction to the Satire of FitzRoy's Narrative of the Voyages of the Adventure and Beagle

Summary

'a humble toadyish follower…': Not all pictures of Darwin during the Beagle voyage are flattering.  Published here for the first time is a complete transcript of a satirical account of the Beagle’s brief visit in 1836 to the Cocos Keeling islands…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … Hare; the equally consequential legal question of the status of those who lived on Cocos-Keeling – …
Page:  1 2  Next
letter