Dear all.

I would like to draw your attention to Wednesday's seminar in the series Instructing Colonial Natural History at Uppsala University  by Caroline Cornish:   'A few plain instructions": William Hooker and 'A Manual of Scientific Enquiry' (1849)'. Sorry  for any cross postings!

Date: October 25.
Time: 15.00-16.00 CET
Location: Zoom.
For Zoom-link please email: instructingnaturalhistory@uu.se

Abstract: 

Britain in the 1840s and ‘50s witnessed the publication of a proliferation of instruction manuals on field collecting, targeted at those travelling in a range of capacities. Collecting institutions and government departments adopted this medium to direct the traveller in a manner that would best serve them in the acquisition of their respective desiderata, be that specimens, artefacts, or observations and recordings of natural phenomena. It was in this context that the British Admiralty published A Manual of Scientific Enquiry: Prepared for the Use of Officers in Her Majesty’s Navy; and Travellers in General in 1849. Edited by astronomer and polymath John Herschel, the Manual contained chapters on what were considered the major sciences of the day, each written by a leading authority in their field. The chapter on botany was written by William Jackson Hooker, director of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, which had not long previously passed from royal to state ownership. This paper will examine Hooker’s chapter in detail, teasing out the significance of his stipulations for herbarium and museum specimens. It will consider these within two overlapping contexts: the Baconian empiricist thought which strongly influenced scientific practice in the first half of the 19th century; and the emergent institutionalisation of science in colonial metropoles. In doing so it will address the question: what were the affordances and limitations of instructions written by metropolitan scientists in the mid-19th century?
For our seminar program and more information about our research please see: https://instructingnaturalhistory.com/
 
All welcome!

My best,
Linda



Linda Andersson Burnett.

Wallenberg Academy Fellow

Associate Professor, Department of History of Science and Ideas  / Inst. för idé- och lärdomshistoria 

Uppsala University  / Uppsala universitet


https://instructingnaturalhistory.com/


Member of the Swedish Young Academy

https://www.sverigesungaakademi.se/


Latest publications  / senaste publikationer: 


'Collecting humanity in the age of Enlightenment: The Hudson’s Bay Company and Edinburgh University’s natural history museum', Global Intellectual History (2022)


  1. 'Humanity on the move in the era of Enlightenment and colonisation', Global Intellectual History (2022)






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