The natural history review (1854-1865)
Citation:
Miguel DeArce, The natural history review (1854-1865), Archives of natural history, 39, 2, 2012, 253 - 269Download Item:
Abstract:
ABSTRACT: The natural history review was a quarterly founded in 1854 by Edward Perceval Wright,
then an undergraduate student of zoology at Trinity College Dublin. Its first editorial committee (1856?
1860) held traditional views of natural history. By 1860 The natural history review had failed, ostensibly
for lack of subscribers, and Wright put it in the hands of Thomas Henry Huxley who, together with Joseph
Hooker, John Tyndall and others, was then looking for a vehicle to disseminate the agenda of what
Huxley later called ?scientific naturalism?. Against advice from his friends, Darwin, Lyell and Hooker,
Huxley accepted the editorship, preserving the title but giving The natural history review a new direction
by replacing the former editorial team with some of his like-minded colleagues. Extant correspondence
between several of these comprises dozens of letters in which The natural history review (1861?1865)
was discussed. By the end of 1862 Huxley had given up on it, but the periodical survived until
July 1865 with Hooker at the head. Throughout this second series, Charles Darwin exercised an
unofficial, effective, and to today?s eyes, ethically questionable editorial role. The natural history review
ceased publication under Hooker in 1865. Competition from other publications, the lack of a clear
purpose and the prevalence of ideology over business sense in the editor-in-chief were the likely reasons
for its repeated failures.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/mdearceDescription:
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Author: DE ARCE, MIGUEL
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Archives of natural history39
2
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