About the Book
The interactions between literature and science and between literature and psychoanalysis have been among the most thriving areas for interdisciplinary study in recent years. Work in these 'open fields' has taught us to recognize the interdependence of different cultures of knowledge and experience, revealing the multiple ways in which science, literature, and psychoanalysis have been mutually enabling and defining, as well as corrective and contestatory of each
other. Inspired by Gillian Beer's path-breaking work on literature and science, this volume presents fourteen new essays by leading American and British writers. They focus on the evolutionary sciences in
the nineteeth-century; the early years of psychoanalysis, from Freud to Ella Freeman Sharpe; and the modern development of the physical sciences. Drawing on recent debates within the history of science, psychoanalytic literary criticism, intellectual history, and gender studies, the volume makes a major contribution to our understanding of the formation of knowledge. Among its recurrent themes are: curiosity and epistemology; 'growth', 'maturity', and 'coming of age' as structuring metaphors
(several essays focus especially on childhood); taxonomy; sleep and dreaming and elusive knowledge; the physiology of truth; and the gender politics of scientific theory and practice. The essays also
reflect Beer's extensive influence as a literary critic, with close readings of works by Charlotte Brontë, Alfred Lord Tennyson, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, Henry James, Oscar Wilde, H. G. Wells, Edith Ayrton Zangwill, Charlotte Haldane, Virginia Woolf, George Orwell, and Karin Boye.
Table of Contents:
Helen Small: Introduction
1: Nigel Leask: Darwin's 'Second Sun': Alexander von Humboldt and the Genesis of The Voyage of the Beagle
2: George Levine: 'And If It Be a Pretty Woman All the Better' - Darwin and Sexual Selection
3: Harriet Ritvo: Ordering Creation, or Maybe Not
4: Helen Small: Chances Are: Henry Buckle, Thomas Hardy, and the Individual at Risk
5: Sally Shuttleworth: The Psychology of Childhood in Victorian Literature and Medicine
6: Rachel Bowlby: A Freudian Curiosity
7: Suzanne Raitt: Freud's Theory of Metaphor: Beyond the Pleasure Principle, Nineteenth-Century Science and Figurative Language
8: Jacqueline Rose: On Not Being Able to Sleep
9: Mary Jacobus: 'Brownie' Sharpe and the Stuff of Dreams
10: Trudi Tate: On Not Knowing Why: Memorialising the Light Brigade
11: Kate Flint: Sounds of the City: Virginia Woolf and Modern Noise
12: Maroula Joannou: 'Chloe Liked Olivia': The Woman Scientist, Sex, and Suffrage
13: Alison Winter: The Chemistry of Truth
14: E. F. Keller: Coming of Age
Index
About the Author :
Biographical Note on Gillian Beer:
Dame Gillian Beer was born on 27 January 1935 in Bookham, Surrey, and was educated at St Anne's College, Oxford. On graduating she lectured at Bedford College, London, (1959-62) and Liverpool University (1962-4). A Fellow at Girton College, Cambridge, between 1965 and 1994, Gillian Beer began lecturing at Cambridge in 1966 and became Reader in Literature and Narrative in 1971. She was made Professor of English in 1989 and in 1994 became King Edward VII Professor of English Literature and
President of Clare Hall at Cambridge. She holds honorary degrees from Liverpool University, Leicester University, Cardiff University, Anglia Polytechnic University, and Université de Paris Sorbonne, and has
been awarded medals by M.I.T., St Andrew's University, and the National Autonomous University, Mexico City. Gillian Beer became a DBE in 1998.
She was a Booker judge in 1993, Vice-President of the British Academy from 1994 to 1996, Chairman of the Poetry Book Society (1992-6), and Chairman of the Judges of the Booker Prize for Fiction (1997). She is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She was a Booker judge in 1993 and Chair of the Booker judges in 1997. Her books include Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot and Nineteenth-Century
Fiction (1983, 2nd edition 2000) and Virginia Woolf: the Common Ground (1996).
Review :
A complex and brilliant group of essays explores the shifting sands of category construction. Isobel Armstrong, Times Literary Supplement The essays in Literature, Science, Psychoanalysis, 1830-1970 are, reasonably enough, arranged historically and roughly by topic, but grouping them according to Beer's interests and methods brings out their arresting newness. Isobel Armstrong, Times Literary Supplement