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Description
George Combe was the author of The Constitution of Man, an ethical treatise that sold over 100,000 copies in Britain and 200,000 copies in America by 1900. The quirkiness of his life and work, and the fact that he befriended and influenced many public figures - from Prince Albert to George Eliot - make for an engaging story. Queen Victoria's Skull, however, does more than tell the tale of one idiosyncratic individual. By tracing the development of Combe's intellectual interests, it provides a prism through which to view Victorian culture, science and politics, covering themes of class, religion, sex, crime, art and the theatre. David Stack has written an entertaining and erudite study of an important, and now neglected, Victorian figure.
Table of Contents
1 Writing Combe's Life
2 'Toots, laddie'
3 The Old Philosophy and the New
4 Combe's Development
5 'The rascal' and his 'willing pupil'
6 Combe's Constitution
7 What the Actress said to the Phrenologist
8 Cecilia, the Scientist's Wife
9 Combe in the USA : Quackery, Commercialism and the Civic Ideal
10 Heidelberg, Haemorrhoids and Health
11 Italy and Art
12 Educating Albert
13 The New Philosophy
14 Respectable Radicalism : George Eliot and Mesmerism
15 Racial Science and Racial Politics
16 God's Secular Providence
Product details
| Published | 02 Jun 2008 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 368 |
| ISBN | 9780826444004 |
| Imprint | Hambledon Continuum |
| Illustrations | 10 |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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'This is an interesting insight into the minds of intelligent Victorians.' BBC History Magazine, October 2008
Stephen Halliday
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"Stack's book does a superior job of reviewing Combe's colorful story. Any scholar with a general interest in Victorian intellectual culture would be well served by this text. Beyond academic readers, Stack's book would probably operate well at the graduate level." -Roger Pauly, History: Reviews of New Books, Winter 2009
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"...Stack's biography of Combe has great merit. It provides an archival basis for many of it judgements, and provides an intelligent picture of a Scot who was, by the standards of time, a publishing sensation, in addition to being a popular lecturer and an effective educational reformer." British Journal for the History of Science, 2009
























