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4 - Re-reading Isambard Kingdom Brunel: Engineering Literature in the Early Nineteenth Century

from II - Pushing the Boundaries of ‘Literature and Science’

Ben Marsden
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
Ben Marsden
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
Hazel Hutchison
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
Ralph O'Connor
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
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Summary

Accounts of the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel have long emphasized his originality although not always in glowing terms. His ‘besetting fault’, stated The Times in 1859, was a ‘seeking for novelty, where the adoption of a well-known model would have sufficed’. Certainly Brunel had a flair for bold experiment and the many hagiographic treatments of him, marking him out as a ‘visionary’, have minimized his debts to his predecessors. Of course, Brunel did learn from others but, with engineers more often represented as men of works than of words, the fact that his knowledge and practice were bound up with literacy is rarely admitted. Even for the best known engineers, reading and writing await sustained historical attention. So too does the exploration of an early nineteenth-century ‘engineering literature’: those writings produced, consumed and variously appropriated in connection with engineering practice. It has been difficult to document literary practices for members of a notoriously ‘papyrophobic’ profession. In this chapter, however, I ask what Isambard Kingdom Brunel read and wrote, how he read and wrote, why he wrote as he did, what he wrote about the literary productions of others – and why he sometimes avoided, and advised others against using, print. Answers to those questions reveal a literary landscape of early nineteenth-century engineering.

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Chapter
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Uncommon Contexts
Encounters between Science and Literature, 1800–1914
, pp. 83 - 110
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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