安德鲁·朗作品中的进化论民俗

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Anna McCullough
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文建立在伯纳德·莱特曼和彼得·鲍勒关于维多利亚时代进化的非达尔文性质的著作的基础上,认为尽管他们的论点有助于重新定位我们对进化史学的理解,但他们低估了维多利亚时代进化理论的多样性。维多利亚时代的进化论是非常独特的,因为每个人(科学家、作家或读者)都根据自己的先入为主的观念来解释进化论,从而产生了无数的进化论。为了说明这种多样性,本文考察了安德鲁·朗的作品,他是19世纪末一位多产的记者、人类学家和童话爱好者。我将重点介绍他的两部大部分未被研究的作品,以展示他是如何揭露和批评维多利亚时代关于进化论和进化论起源的假设的。第一部作品《希金斯,进化论的发明者》(1897)用讽刺的手法揭示了进化论的理论历史在19世纪经常被忽视。第二部《无人公主》(The Princess Nobody, 1884年)是一部儿童童话,它展示了童话中的比喻如何帮助现代读者理解进化思想。值得注意的是,这两部作品都是对古老文本的重复利用,这些文本也讨论了进化论的问题,这使得朗成为了解释和批评进化论的民间传统的参与者。朗认为进化论类似于一个神话故事,被一代又一代地讲述和重新诠释。他的著作表明,进化论的起源是模糊的,而传统的童话故事传达了关于人类起源和动物亲属关系的观念,这些观念早于达尔文的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Folklore of Evolution in Andrew Lang’s Writings
Abstract This article builds upon Bernard Lightman and Peter Bowler’s works on the non-Darwinian nature of Victorian evolution, arguing that while their arguments helpfully reorient our understanding of evolution’s historiography, they underestimate the diversity of evolutionary theory in the Victorian era. Victorian evolution was highly idiosyncratic, as each individual (scientist, author, or reader) interpreted evolution according to his or her own preconceptions, resulting in a myriad of evolutionary theories. To illustrate this diversity, this article examines the work of Andrew Lang, a prolific late-nineteenth-century journalist, anthropologist, and fairy-tale enthusiast. I focus on two of his largely unstudied works to demonstrate how he exposed and critiqued Victorian assumptions about evolution and the origins of the theory. The first work, ‘Higgins, the Inventor of Evolution’ (1897), uses satire to reveal that evolution’s theoretical history was often overlooked in the nineteenth century. The second, The Princess Nobody (1884), is a children’s fairy tale that exemplifies how fairy-tale tropes can help modern readers grasp evolutionary ideas. Significantly, both works recycle older texts that also address evolutionary questions, making Lang a participant in a folkloric tradition of interpreting and critiquing evolutionary theory. Lang viewed evolutionary theory as similar to a mythic story that is told and reinterpreted through the generations. His writing demonstrates that the origins of evolutionary theory are ambiguous, and that traditional fairy tales convey ideas about human origins and kinship with animals that predate Darwin’s studies.
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