Thesis ID: CBB001561190

The Ministry of Chance: British Romanticism, Darwinian Evolutionary Theory and the Aleatory (2008)

unapi

Burkett, Andrew (Author)


Duke University
Pfau, Thomas


Publication Date: 2008
Edition Details: Advisor: Pfau, Thomas
Physical Details: 319 pp.
Language: English

The Ministry of Chance proposes that Charles Darwin's emergent understanding and depiction of organic variation must be seen in direct and significant continuity with Romantic representations of the aleatory - that is, those forms, processes, and phenomena that are understood as governed by the operations of chance. Romantic literature murmurs quietly but continuously about the unexpected, the accidental, and the desultory. Moreover, although the concept of the aleatory has been largely overlooked by Romanticist critique, Romantic-era texts including William Wordsworth's The Prelude (1799, 1805, 1850) and Percy Bysshe Shelley's Queen Mab (1813), Mont Blanc (1817), and Prometheus Unbound (1820) meditate often on chance and, in so doing, reveal that Romantic literature is not only topically preoccupied with chance but that it is also structurally dependent on the aleatory. The transition from first- to second-generation Romanticism is characterized, I suggest, by a gradual change in the way in which these poets envision causality, and these two historical moments are each the topic of a subsequent chapter of this project. Furthermore, this study aligns Darwin's conception and representation of evolution with this shift in Romanticism. Driven by complex plots encrypted in minute and variational organic forms, Darwinian evolutionary theory is similarly founded upon chance, both formally and conceptually. In the years leading up to the publication of On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, Or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life (1859), Darwin becomes increasingly fascinated with the aleatory. Moving beyond his analyses of island populations, Darwin begins investigating the role of chance in the dispersion of continental floral populations as examined in his "Botanical Arithmetic" drafts, a set of largely unpublished documents held at the University of Cambridge's "Charles Darwin Archive." My project puts this Romantic poetry and Darwinian science into conversation by drawing upon the work of three critical and theoretical fields: Science Studies, the history and philosophy of biology, and Romantic criticism and theory. Such a cross-disciplinary approach to the aleatory in these narratives helps to illuminate the ways that British Romanticism and Darwinian evolutionary theory together "cohabit" a nineteenth- century paradigm change in reconceptions of chance and causality.

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Description Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 70/02 (2009). Pub. no. AAT 3346753.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001561190/

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Authors & Contributors
Faflak, Joel
Purton, Valerie
Harley, Alexis
White, Paul S.
Stott, Rebecca
Richter, Virginia
Concepts
Evolution
Science and literature
Romanticism
Darwinism
Chance
Science and culture
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
20th century
17th century
16th century
Places
Great Britain
Germany
Europe
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