America's Darwin

Darwinian Theory and U.S. Literary Culture

Title Details

Pages: 400

Illustrations: 2 b&w photos, 4 figures

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 06/15/2014

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4675-5

List Price: $36.95

eBook

Pub Date: 06/26/2014

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4690-8

List Price: $36.95

Hardcover

Pub Date: 06/15/2014

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4448-5

List Price: $120.95

America's Darwin

Darwinian Theory and U.S. Literary Culture

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  • Description
  • Reviews
  • Contributors

While much has been written about the impact of Darwin’s theories on U.S. culture, and countless scholarly collections have been devoted to the science of evolution, few have addressed the specific details of Darwin’s theories as a cultural force affecting U.S. writers. America’s Darwin fills this gap and features a range of critical approaches that examine U.S. textual responses to Darwin’s works.


The scholars in this collection represent a range of disciplines—literature, history of science, women’s studies, geology, biology, entomology, and anthropology. All pay close attention to the specific forms that Darwinian evolution took in the United States, engaging not only with Darwin’s most famous works, such as On the Origin of Species, but also with less familiar works, such as The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals.


Each contributor considers distinctive social, cultural, and intellectual conditions that affected the reception and dissemination of evolutionary thought, from before the publication of On the Origin of Species to the early years of the twenty-first century. These essays engage with the specific details and language of a wide selection of Darwin’s texts, treating his writings as primary sources essential to comprehending the impact of Darwinian language on American writers and thinkers. This careful engagement with the texts of evolution enables us to see the broad points of its acceptance and adoption in the American scene; this approach also highlights the ways in which writers, reformers, and others reconfigured Darwinian language to suit their individual purposes.


America’s Darwin demonstrates the many ways in which writers and others fit themselves to a narrative of evolution whose dominant motifs are contingency and uncertainty. Collectively, the authors make the compelling case that the interpretation of evolutionary theory in the U.S. has always shifted in relation to prevailing cultural anxieties.

An important advance on the current state of Darwin criticism in American literary and cultural studies and, even more, a model for urgently needed work in such biocultural studies as animality and ecological thinking.

—Laura Dassow Walls, author of The Passage to Cosmos: Alexander von Humboldt and the Shaping of America

One reads these essays with a constantly renewed sense of the capaciousness of Darwin’s intellect, interested equally in the movements of earthworms and the reasons why humans bare their teeth.

—Christoph Irmscher, Reports of the National Center for Science Education

Tina Gianquitto and Lydia Fisher successfully chose essays from a wide range of disciplines, yet managed to thread the articles into a strong and coherent text. . . . America’s Darwin contributes to a deeper understanding of how specific reactions and interpretations were formed in connection to American culture.

—Mary E. Kohler, American Studies

Tina Gianquitto

Paul Ohler

Kimberly Hamlin

Lydia Fisher

Gillian Feeley-Harnik

Carol Anelli

Jeff Walker

Nicole Merola

Gregory Eiselein

Melanie Dawson

Lilian Carswell

Karen Lentz Madison

R.D. Madison

Prof. Dr. Virginia Richter

Heike Schaefer

About the Author/Editor

Tina Gianquitto (Editor)
TINA GIANQUITTO is an associate professor of literature in the Division of Liberal Arts and International Studies at the Colorado School of Mines.

Lydia Fisher (Editor)
LYDIA FISHER is a visiting assistant professor in the Department of English at Portland State University.