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Jane Austen & Charles Darwin - Naturalists and Novelists (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Jane Austen & Charles Darwin - Naturalists and Novelists (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Are Jane Austen and Charles Darwin the two great English
empiricists of the nineteenth century? Peter W. Graham poses this
question as he brings these two icons of nineteenth-century British
culture into intellectual conversation in his provocative new book.
Graham shows that while the one is generally termed a naturalist
(Darwin's preferred term for himself) and the other a novelist,
these characterizations are at least partially interchangeable, as
each author possessed skills that would serve well in either arena.
Both Austen and Darwin are naturalists who look with a sharp, cold
eye at the concrete particulars of the world around them. Both are
in certain senses novelists who weave densely particularized and
convincingly grounded narratives that convey their personal
observations and perceptions to wide readerships. When taken
seriously, the words and works of Austen and Darwin encourage their
readers to look closely at the social and natural worlds around
them and form opinions based on individual judgment rather than on
transmitted opinion. Graham's four interlocked essays begin by
situating Austen and Darwin in the English empirical tradition and
focusing on the uncanny similarities in the two writers' respective
circumstances and preoccupations. Both Austen and Darwin were
fascinated by sibling relations. Both were acute observers and
analysts of courtship rituals. Both understood constant change as
the way of the world, whether the microcosm under consideration is
geological, biological, social, or literary. Both grasped the
importance of scale in making observations. Both discerned the
connection between minute, particular causes and vast, general
effects. Employing the trenchant analytical talents associated with
his subjects and informed by a wealth of historical and
biographical detail and the best of recent work by historians of
science, Graham has given us a new entree into Austen's and
Darwin's writings.
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