This article is concerned with the relationship between British colonization and the intellectual underpinnings of natural history writing between the 17th and the early 19th centuries. During this period, I argue, a significant discursive shift reframed both natural history and the concept of humanity. In the early modern period, compiling natural histories was often conceived as an endeavour to understand God’s creation. Many of the natural historians involved in the early Royal Society of London were driven by a theological conviction that the New World contained the natural knowledge once possessed by Adam, but lost in the Fall from Eden. By the early 19th century, however, this theological framework for natural history had been superse...
PublishedArticleIn the historiography of the life sciences, the period around 1800 plays a crucial r...
"Natural Science and the Origins of the British Empire" represents a first history of the British Em...
International audienceThis article analyses the conditions of formation of the concept of " race " i...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
This article argues that the British Histories of the Indian Archipelago written by William Marsden,...
The Enlightenment has long been defined as an age of expanding knowledge. Practices of collection, c...
International audienceThis article investigates the redefinition of human and animal sociabilities i...
This article explores the place of the natural sciences in the making of the Second British Empire. ...
First the article offers a contextual discussion of more widespread Latitudinarian views of nature a...
In this work we outline a bio-ecological approach to studying history. We show that human societies ...
This article focuses on the studies and discourses of mostly British scholars of the early colonial ...
This essay seeks to supplement an established critical tradition that reads natural history in neo-V...
A number of important developments and discoveries across the British Empire's imperial landscape du...
[Extract] The idea at the heart of this book is an interesting one: that the time during which hte B...
This dissertation analyzes a type of knowledge that I call “lived botany” to argue that colonial set...
PublishedArticleIn the historiography of the life sciences, the period around 1800 plays a crucial r...
"Natural Science and the Origins of the British Empire" represents a first history of the British Em...
International audienceThis article analyses the conditions of formation of the concept of " race " i...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
This article argues that the British Histories of the Indian Archipelago written by William Marsden,...
The Enlightenment has long been defined as an age of expanding knowledge. Practices of collection, c...
International audienceThis article investigates the redefinition of human and animal sociabilities i...
This article explores the place of the natural sciences in the making of the Second British Empire. ...
First the article offers a contextual discussion of more widespread Latitudinarian views of nature a...
In this work we outline a bio-ecological approach to studying history. We show that human societies ...
This article focuses on the studies and discourses of mostly British scholars of the early colonial ...
This essay seeks to supplement an established critical tradition that reads natural history in neo-V...
A number of important developments and discoveries across the British Empire's imperial landscape du...
[Extract] The idea at the heart of this book is an interesting one: that the time during which hte B...
This dissertation analyzes a type of knowledge that I call “lived botany” to argue that colonial set...
PublishedArticleIn the historiography of the life sciences, the period around 1800 plays a crucial r...
"Natural Science and the Origins of the British Empire" represents a first history of the British Em...
International audienceThis article analyses the conditions of formation of the concept of " race " i...