Article ID: CBB001320191

Botanical Smuts and Hermaphrodites: Lydia Becker, Darwin's Botany, and Education Reform (2013)

unapi

In 1868, Lydia Becker (1827--1890), the renowned Manchester suffragist, announced in a talk before the British Association for the Advancement of Science that the mind had no sex. A year later, she presented original botanical research at the BAAS, contending that a parasitic fungus forced normally single-sex female flowers of Lychnis diurna to develop stamens and become hermaphroditic. This essay uncovers the complex relationship between Lydia Becker's botanical research and her stance on women's rights by investigating how her interest in evolutionary theory, as well as her correspondence with Charles Darwin, critically informed her reform agendas by providing her with a new vocabulary for advocating for equality. One of the facts that Becker took away from her work on Lychnis was that even supposedly fixed, dichotomous categories such as biological sex became unfocused under the evolutionary lens. The details of evolutionary theory, from specific arguments on structural adaptations to more encompassing theories on heredity (i.e., pangenesis), informed Becker's understanding of human physiology. At the same time, Becker's belief in the fundamental equality of the sexes enabled her to perceive the distinction between inherent, biological differences and culturally contingent ones. She applied biological principles to social constructs as she asked: Do analogous evolutionary forces act on humans?

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Authors & Contributors
Fontes da Costa, Palmira
Evans, Samantha
Caulkins, Tamara
Smith, Elise Lawton
Page, Judith W
Zachmann, Karin
Journals
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
The Chemical Educator
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Journal of the History of Biology
Journal of Literature and Science
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Tinta da China
University of Chicago Press
Southern Illinois University Press
Reaktion Books
Johns Hopkins University Press
Concepts
Science and gender
Botany
Evolution
Women in science
Science and politics
Darwinism
People
Darwin, Charles Robert
Leonor de Almeida Portugal, Marquise of Alorna
Lincoln, Abraham
Sophia Bledsoe Herrick
Nevill, Dorothy Fanny Walpole
Blackwell, Antoinette Louisa Brown
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
21st century
20th century, early
20th century
Places
Great Britain
United States
Germany
Portugal
Sweden
Greece
Institutions
Women's Engineering Society
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