Article ID: CBB001213491

The Beauty of Victorian Beasts: Illustration in the Reverend J. G. Wood's Homes without Hands (2013)

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The Reverend John George Wood (1827--1889) was a successful popularizer of natural history in the Victorian era. His Illustrated natural history (1853) and Common objects series (1857--1858) have been written about extensively. However, historians have largely ignored his most successful book, Homes without hands, in spite of its exquisite designs and profound connections with natural domesticity. In addition, little research has been conducted on the illustrations that appear across Wood's publications, despite their great popularity during his lifetime. This article examines the creation, popularization and methods of communication of this beautiful natural history book. A work explicitly about animal dwellings, Homes without hands was exceedingly popular during its time, as will be shown through an analysis of previously unpublished impression and sales records from the Longman's publishing archive at Reading University. Furthermore, this article will reveal Wood's use of advanced methods in printing and engraving technologies, which made Homes without hands more accessible to the public, particularly through the use of electrotype. In addition, Wood adapted his illustrations for the sake of uniting pleasing aesthetics with scientific representations. Wood's proactive involvement in the illustrative processes of the book ensured that his vision was fully enacted in the final designs. There were elements of danger and domesticity present throughout Wood's work, which functioned as a method for enticing readership and communicating social and religious messages. This will be revealed through a close analysis of a few specific illustrations. Wood dynamically united illustration and text to create a useful domestic piece of natural history, for and about the home. This article seeks to combine methods of examination of both natural history illustration and literature through the investigation of a single book, to better communicate how works of Victorian natural history functioned as a whole.

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Description On a popular Victorian-era natural history book.


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Authors & Contributors
Topham, Johnathan R.
Moore, P. G.
Fallon, Richard
Wotton, Roger S.
Ford, Lisa
Wylie, Caitlin Donahue
Journals
Archives of Natural History
History of Science
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Book History
Publishers
Clio Publishing
Pickering & Chatto
Palgrave Macmillan
Edinburgh University Press
Ashgate
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Popularization
Natural history
Publishers and publishing
Books
Science and society
Illustrations
People
Hutchinson, Henry Neville
Westell, William Percival
Jameson, Robert
Michaux, François André
Martineau, Harriet
Malthus, Thomas Robert
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century
18th century
20th century, late
Places
Great Britain
India
England
United States
North America
Japan
Institutions
Bombay Natural History Society
Macmillan
Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge
University of Edinburgh
British Museum. Natural History
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