Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Experiment and the Art of Writing
- 1 The Art of Science: Nineteenth-Century Theory and the Logic of Practice
- 2 Learning by Experiment: T. H. Huxley and the Aesthetic Nature of Education
- 3 Following the Actors: G. H. Lewes’s and George Eliot’s Studies in Life
- 4 Steps Towards an Ecology of Experience: Empiricism, Pragmatism and George Eliot’s The Spanish Gypsy
- 5 Speech in Action: Victorian Philology and the Uprooting of Language
- 6 William Morris’s ‘Work-Pleasure’: Literature, Science and Fine Art
- 7 Robert Browning’s Experiment: Composition and Communication in The Ring and the Book
- 8 The Making of Sensation Fiction
- Clothing Matter: Thomas Carlyle’s Sartor Resartus
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction: Experiment and the Art of Writing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor’s Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Experiment and the Art of Writing
- 1 The Art of Science: Nineteenth-Century Theory and the Logic of Practice
- 2 Learning by Experiment: T. H. Huxley and the Aesthetic Nature of Education
- 3 Following the Actors: G. H. Lewes’s and George Eliot’s Studies in Life
- 4 Steps Towards an Ecology of Experience: Empiricism, Pragmatism and George Eliot’s The Spanish Gypsy
- 5 Speech in Action: Victorian Philology and the Uprooting of Language
- 6 William Morris’s ‘Work-Pleasure’: Literature, Science and Fine Art
- 7 Robert Browning’s Experiment: Composition and Communication in The Ring and the Book
- 8 The Making of Sensation Fiction
- Clothing Matter: Thomas Carlyle’s Sartor Resartus
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Experience, as we know, has ways of boiling over, and making us correct our present formulas.
Empiricism is conceived of as tied up to what has been, or is, ‘given’. But experience in its vital form is experimental, an effort to change the given.
This is not a book about Victorian knowledge, but about the activities through which knowledge is brought into being, sustained, debated, modified, adapted, corrected, used, reimagined, extended and made subject to continuous transformation and change. In fact, all that follows is premised on the assumption that there is no knowledge without (or outside of) practices and processes that assemble and disassemble it, or that put it to work, thus exposing it to the possibility of becoming otherwise. ‘[I]f there is a sun around which all else revolves, it is performance, not knowledge,’ as Andrew Pickering puts it, ‘knowledge is a planet or maybe a comet that sometimes participates in the dynamics of practice and sometimes does not’. Building on this assumption, my title promises a work about ways of knowing, about pursuits of what is not yet (not quite) or no longer known, rather than about the ideas and theories in which such pursuits may be taken to originate or terminate. In short, this book is concerned with what takes place in the midst of ongoing knowledge formation, on the way towards goals and insights that are yet to be (more precisely) defined. It examines what I call the experimental field, the scene of emergent meaning, in which people's experiences of the material world come to be gradually translated, by means of actions, instruments, controversies and skills, into forms of generally readable, but not necessarily finished text.
Being a literary scholar, I will specifically explore how these ‘processes of finding out and making sense’ are debated and carried out in writing, by means of literature in the most general sense of ‘everything written with letters or printed in a book’, as Matthew Arnold has it. Yet, much of the methodical approach that informs my readings has been suggested by historical and sociological studies of ‘science in action’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Artful ExperimentsWays of Knowing in Victorian Literature and Science, pp. 1 - 16Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2018