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Introduction

Valerie Purton
Affiliation:
Anglia Ruskin University
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Summary

‘I have sometimes found in a song of Tennyson the most fitting garment of a thought engendered by a generalisation of Science.’

—Richard Owen, 1859

‘[T]here is a community establishing itself between literature and science, and I rejoice in that community […] for the highest aim of science and literature, is the same; it is to diffuse, to reveal and to embody truth.’

—Thomas Henry Huxley, 1860

‘Presented rightly to the mind, the discoveries and generalisations of modern science constitute a poem more sublime than has ever yet addressed the human imagination. The natural philosopher today may dwell amid conceptions which beggar those of Milton.’

—John Tyndall, 1863

Charles Darwin and Alfred, Lord Tennyson were exact contemporaries, born in 1809, who came to have emblematic roles as representatives, respectively, of science and literature in the Victorian age. Their juxtaposition in this volume of essays is indicative of the easy commerce between literature and science during that period and provides a salutary reminder that the two categories need to be understood within their historical context rather than assumed to be trans-historical absolutes. Readers of Darwin and Tennyson included all the significant thinkers of the day, in every field. Two — John Ruskin and Thomas Henry Huxley — are given special attention in this collection, in which a range of twenty-first-century critics from various literary disciplines address issues raised by the interaction of Victorian literature and science.

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Chapter
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Darwin, Tennyson and their Readers
Explorations in Victorian Literature and Science
, pp. vii - xxii
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2013

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