Location
WC1N 2LX
Dates
This exhibition CLOSED on Sun, 11th Nov 2018
This exhibition has finished.
Cost: £9.50
Description
In 1839, the writer and physiologist George Henry Lewes visited Charles Dickens at Doughty Street and examined his bookshelves. He left accusing Dickens of being ‘completely outside philosophy, science, and the higher literature’. For over 150 years, it was thought that Charles Dickens was either not interested in science, or was downright hostile to it. But Dickens's science was not the science of books or learned institutions; for Dickens, science mattered when it transformed lives by curing disease or cleaning streets, or opening up new vistas of wonder in a humdrum world.
Charles Dickens: Man of Science aims to reveal Dickens not only as a scientific enthusiast, but as the key communicator of science in the Victorian age. Displaying his writings alongside artefacts, instruments, and texts of the developing sciences, we share the story of Dickens’s friendships and scientific passions. Journeying through some of Dickens's favourite sciences - geology, thermodynamics, chemistry, and medicine - we reveal that what made him a great writer was precisely what made him a man of science.
Guest academic co-curator, Dr Adelene Buckland of King’s College London.
Contact and Booking Details
More information at this website.
No need to book tickets - just turn up on the day.
Disclaimer
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All images are supplied by the exhibition organiser.
This exhibition has finished.
This event runs over several days/weeks. Dates include: