Marvelous Plasticity and the Fortunes of Species in The Water Babies
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Issue Date
2014-04-01Author
Neill, Anna
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, author accepted manuscript
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In The Water-Babies, the wild, wicked child who matures into a man of science appears to “recapitulate” the story of the human rise to preeminence in the animal kingdom. Yet Kingsley uses evolutionary thought precisely to attack the notion of biological/social progress and the suffering it causes. He does so by identifying the impact of the social and physical environment on individual development and inviting us to consider how the physical interaction between developing mind and developing world affects broader patterns of human behavior. Playfully evoking the evolutionary dynamics involving organism, culture, and species-level traits, he points to a form of extragenetic inheritance prompted by open-ended stories.
Description
This is the author's accepted manuscript. Copyright © 2014 The Johns Hopkins University Press. This article first appeared in Philosophy and Literature, Volume 38, Issue 1, April, 2014. The original publication is available from http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/philosophy_and_literature/index.html
Collections
- English Scholarly Works [308]
Citation
Neill, Anna. "Marvelous Plasticity and the Fortunes of Species in The Water Babies." Philosophy and Literature 38.1 (April, 2014).
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