Science and Technology in Nineteenth-Century Ireland [edeposit]
Juliana Adelman and Éadaoin Agnew [editors]. 'Science and Technology in Nineteenth-Century Ireland', Society for the Study of Nineteenth Century Ireland, 14 (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2011)
This interdisciplinary volume expands the existing literature in this area by moving its focus beyond the intellectual elite and relating Irish scientific activities to the historical study of Irish literature and culture, as well as the context of Victorian science more generally.
Recent Submissions
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Front Matter and Table of Contents [to Science and Technology in Nineteenth-Century Ireland]
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
Introduction [to Science and Technology in Nineteenth-Century Ireland]
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
The learned gentlemen are in town: the British Association meeting of 1857 in Dublin's popular press
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
Practical science and religious politics: the Glasnevin botanic gardens' Sunday opening controversy, 1861
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
The Irish response to Darwinism
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
Grubbs of Dublin: telescope-makers to the World
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
'Pilf'ring from the first creation': Dáibhí de Barra's Parliament of weavers
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
A microscopic look at Mary Ward: gender, science and religion in nineteenth-century Ireland
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011) -
Asserting medical identities in mid-nineteenth century Ireland: the case of the water cure in Cork
(Four Courts PressIE, 2011)