Imperial Nature: Joseph Hooker and the Practices of Victorian Science

Author(s)

joseph Dalton Hooker (1817–1911) Was An Internationally Renowned Botanist, A Close Friend And Early Supporter Of Charles Darwin, And One Of The First—and Most Successful—british Men Of Science To Become A Full-time Professional. He Was Also, Jim Endersby Argues, The Perfect Embodiment Of Victorian Science. A Vivid Picture Of The Complex Interrelationships Of Scientific Work And Scientific Ideas, imperial Nature Gracefully Uses One Individual’s Career To Illustrate The Changing World Of Science In The Victorian Era.
by Analyzing Hooker’s Career, Endersby Offers Vivid Insights Into The Everyday Activities Of Nineteenth-century Naturalists, Considering Matters As Diverse As Botanical Illustration And Microscopy, Classification, And Specimen Transportation And Storage, To Reveal What They Actually Did, How They Earned A Living, And What Drove Their Scientific Theories. What Emerges Is A Rare Glimpse Of Victorian Scientific Practices In Action. By Focusing On Science’s Material Practices And One Of Its Foremost Practitioners, Endersby Ably Links Concerns About Empire, Professionalism, And Philosophical Practices To The Forging Of A Nineteenth-century Scientific Identity.

annals Of Botany

the Book Fills An Important Gap In The History Of Our Subject, So Deserves To Find Its Way Into The Library Of Every Institution Where Botany Is Taught.

— Peter Ayres

Name in long format: Imperial Nature: Joseph Hooker and the Practices of Victorian Science
ISBN-10: 0226207927
ISBN-13: 9780226207926
Book pages: 429
Book language: en
Edition: Illustrated
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Dimensions: Height: 1 Inches, Length: 8.9 Inches, Weight: 1.38009376012 Pounds, Width: 5.9 Inches

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