Samuel Butler, Victorian Against the Grain: A Critical Overview

Samuel Butler, Victorian Against the Grain: A Critical Overview

by James G. Paradis
Samuel Butler, Victorian Against the Grain: A Critical Overview

Samuel Butler, Victorian Against the Grain: A Critical Overview

by James G. Paradis

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Overview

Samuel Butler (1835-1902), Victorian satirist, critic, and visual artist, possessed one of the most original and inquiring imaginations of his age. The author of two satires, Erewhon (1872) and The Way of All Flesh (1903), Butler's intellectually adventurous explorations along the cultural frontiers of his time appeared in volume after eccentric volume. Author of four works on evolution, he was one of the most prolific evolutionary speculators of his time. He was an innovative travel writer and art historian who used the creative insights of his own painting, photography, and local knowledge to invent, in works like Alps and Sanctuaries (1881), a vibrant Italian culture that contrasted with the spiritually frigid experience of his High Church upbringing.

Despite his range and achievement, there remains surprisingly little contemporary analytical commentary on Butler's work. Samuel Butler, Victorian against the Grain is an interdisciplinary collection of essays that provides a critical overview of Butler's career, one which places his multifaceted body of work within the cultural framework of the Victorian age. The essays, taken together, discuss the formation of Victorian England's ultimate polymath, an artistic and intellectual ventriloquist who assumed an extraordinary range of roles - as satirist, novelist, evolutionist, natural theologian, travel writer, art historian, biographer, classicist, painter, and photographer.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781487549350
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 07/04/2022
Pages: 436
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.97(d)

About the Author

James G. Paradis is the Robert M. Metcalfe Professor of Writing and Humanistic Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments     vii
List of Illustrations     ix
Abbreviations     xi
Introduction   James G. Paradis     3
The New Zealand and Early London Years, 1860-73
From Canterbury Settlement to Erewhon: Butler and Antipodean Counterpoint   Roger Robinson     21
Butler, Memory, and the Future   Gillian Beer     45
The Ironies of Biblical Criticism: From Samuel Butler's 'Resurrection' Essay and The Fair Haven to Erewhon Revisited   Elinor Shaffer     58
The Evolutionist, 1874-86
'The written symbol extends infinitely': Samuel Butler and the Writing of Evolutionary Theory   David Amigoni     91
'A Conspiracy of One': Butler, Natural Theology, and Victorian Popularization   Bernard Lightman     113
Evolutionary Psychology and The Way of All Flesh   Sally Shuttleworth     143
Samuel Butler as Late-Victorian Bachelor: Regulating and Representing the Homoerotic   Herbert Sussman     170
Mind Matters: Butler and Late Nineteenth-Century Psychology   Ruth Parkin-Gounelas     195
On the Margin, 1887-1902
Samuel Butler, Local Identity, and the Periodizing of Northern Italian Art: The Travel Writer-Painter's View of Art History   Clarice Zdanski     223
Samuel Butler's Photography: Observationand the Dynamic Past   Elizabeth Edwards     251
Butler's Narcissus: 'A Tame Oratorio'   Ellen T. Harris     287
Why Homer Was (Not) a Woman: The Reception of The Authoress of the Odyssey   Mary Beard     317
Butler after Butler: The Man of Letters as Outsider   James G. Paradis     343
Chronology     371
Select Bibliography     375
Contributors     393
Credits     397
Index     399
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