Livingstone, David N. (Author)
Using place, politics, and rhetoric as analytical tools, historical geographer David N. Livingstone investigates how religious communities sharing a Scots Presbyterian heritage engaged with Darwin and Darwinism at the turn of the twentieth century. His findings, presented as the prestigious Gifford Lectures, transform our understandings of the relationship between science and religion. The particulars of place---whether in Edinburgh, Belfast, Toronto, Princeton, or Columbia, South Carolina---shaped the response to Darwin's theories. Were they tolerated, repudiated, or welcomed? Livingstone shows how Darwin was read in different ways, with meaning distilled from Darwin's texts depending on readers' own histories---their literary genealogies and cultural preoccupations. That the theory of evolution fared differently in different places, Livingstone writes, is "exactly what Darwin might have predicted. As the theory diffused, it diverged." Dealing with Darwin shows the profound extent to which theological debates about evolution were rooted in such matters as anxieties over control of education, the politics of race relations, the nature of local scientific traditions, and challenges to traditional cultural identity. In some settings, conciliation with the new theory, even endorsement, was possible---demonstrating that attending to the specific nature of individual communities subverts an inclination to assume a single relationship between science and religion in general, evolution and Christianity in particular.
...MoreReview Myrna Perez Sheldon (2016) Review of "Brief Candle in the Dark: My Life in Science". Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences (pp. 538-547).
Review J. David Pleins (2016) Review of "Dealing with Darwin: Place, Politics, and Rhetoric in Religious Engagements with Evolution". Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (pp. 205-206).
Article
Ian Hesketh;
(2020)
The Making of John Tyndall's Darwinian Revolution
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Book
McGrath, Alister E.;
(2011)
Darwinism and the Divine: Evolutionary Thought and Natural Theology
(/isis/citation/CBB001220972/)
Article
Hale, Piers J.;
(2013)
Monkeys into Men and Men into Monkeys: Chance and Contingency in the Evolution of Man, Mind and Morals in Charles Kingsley's Water Babies
(/isis/citation/CBB001320622/)
Article
Holmes, Andrew R.;
(2008)
Presbyterians and Science in the North of Ireland before 1874
(/isis/citation/CBB000850477/)
Book
Ryan, Frank X.;
(2002)
Darwinism and Theology in America: 1850-1930
(/isis/citation/CBB000301628/)
Book
Michael Ruse;
(2016)
Darwinism as Religion: What Literature Tells Us about Evolution
(/isis/citation/CBB247868178/)
Book
McInnis, Gilbert;
(2011)
Evolutionary Mythology in the Writings of Kurt Vonnegut: Darwin, Vonnegut and the Construction of an American Culture
(/isis/citation/CBB001033149/)
Article
See, Sam;
(2010)
The Comedy of Nature: Darwinian Feminism in Virginia Woolf's Between the Acts
(/isis/citation/CBB001032300/)
Book
Richter, Virginia;
(2011)
Literature after Darwin: Human Beasts in Western Fiction, 1859--1939
(/isis/citation/CBB001033151/)
Book
Werth, Barry;
(2009)
Banquet at Delmonico's: Great Minds, the Gilded Age, and the Triumph of Evolution in America
(/isis/citation/CBB000960310/)
Thesis
Cherico, Rebecca Vitz;
(2004)
The Struggle with Darwin in the Turn-of-the-Century Spanish Novel: Emilia Pardo Bazan, Miguel de Unamuno, and Pio Baroja
(/isis/citation/CBB001562038/)
Book
Lander, James;
(2010)
Lincoln and Darwin: Shared Visions of Race, Science, and Religion
(/isis/citation/CBB001023156/)
Book
Hamlin, Kimberly Ann;
(2014)
From Eve to Evolution: Darwin, Science, and Women's Rights in Gilded Age America
(/isis/citation/CBB001422038/)
Article
Hunter, T. Russell;
(2012)
Making a Theist out of Darwin: Asa Gray's Post-Darwinian Natural Theology
(/isis/citation/CBB001250446/)
Article
Manoilenko, Ksenia V.;
(2009)
Pro Et Contra: An Attitude to the Celebration in Commemoration of Charles Darwin in 1909
(/isis/citation/CBB001421101/)
Book
Engels, Eve-Marie;
Glick, Thomas F.;
(2008)
The Reception of Charles Darwin in Europe
(/isis/citation/CBB001022466/)
Article
England, Richard;
(2001)
Natural Selection, Teleology, and the Logos: From Darwin to the Oxford Neo-Darwinists, 1859--1909
(/isis/citation/CBB000671350/)
Thesis
Hampton, Monte Harrell;
(2004)
“Handmaid” or “Assailant”: Debating Science and Scripture in the Culture of the Lost Cause
(/isis/citation/CBB001561735/)
Book
Randall Fuller;
(2018)
The Book That Changed America: How Darwin's Theory of Evolution Ignited a Nation
(/isis/citation/CBB541408015/)
Thesis
Hamlin, Kimberly Ann;
(2007)
Beyond Adam's Rib: How Darwinian Evolutionary Theory Redefined Gender andInfluenced American Feminist Thought, 1870--1920
(/isis/citation/CBB001560667/)
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