The Darwin Correspondence Project: From Zero to 30 in Fifty Years

Description

A journey through Darwin's vast correspondence that had global reach which illustrates the man as a hero and everyman of the 19th century.

Correspondence was one of the essential research tools of nineteenth-century science. This is evident from the collections of letters of many men and women of science in this period, especially the correspondence of Charles Darwin. The global reach of Darwin's research was possible because letters allowed him to establish a world-wide information network and, in some cases, long-term epistolary friendships.

The recent publication of the thirtieth, and final, volume of Darwin's correspondence provides an opportunity to reflect on the work and impact of the Darwin Correspondence Project. With all 15,429 extant letters also freely available online, this discussion will cover the editorial adaptations required as the priority shifted from print to digital as well as what the correspondence reveals about past scientific practice and Darwin's role in it. Viewed through the lens of his letters, Darwin emerges as both 'hero' and 'everyman' of nineteenth-century science.

Anne Secord FLS is an affiliated research scholar in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Cambridge University. She was an editor of The Correspondence of Charles Darwin and worked on volumes 1-7 and 19-30. Her own research focusses on nineteenth-century working-class figures who contributed to science.

Date

This event last took place on: Mon 1st Jul 2024

Location

The Linnean Society
Burlington House
Piccadilly
London
W1J 0BF

Prices

Free

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The Linnean Society
Burlington House
Piccadilly
London
W1J 0BF