{"title":"《安东尼·特罗洛普的爱丁堡伴侣》,弗雷德里克·范·达姆、大卫·斯基尔顿和奥尔特温·德·格雷夫编辑","authors":"D. Morse","doi":"10.2979/victorianstudies.64.3.09","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Periodical culture, steeped as it was in partisan politics, constitutes an important historical backdrop for the book. Keen’s staging of these debates is meticulously detailed while also marking out quarries of knowledge that have yet to be excavated. In chapter 3, for instance, Keen reflects on the pedagogical limitations of classical learning articulated by a critic in the Edinburgh Review (1802–1929) in a consideration of Robert Edgeworth’s Essays on Professional Education (1809). It would have been interesting to see Keen engage with the volume itself, for Edgeworth was a widely read and vocal proponent of practical education; while Edgeworth remarks that the “value of all knowledge must ultimately be decided by its utility,” these claims are also underwritten by an extensive literature appealing to the concept of learning by doing (Essays on Professional Education [J. Johnson, 1809], 371). Such omissions are regrettable, however, chiefly because they might affirm the idea that Keen already makes so convincingly: namely, that the history of these debates reveals how little we actually understand the terms that underlie our own sense of purpose as humanists. And this is not, moreover, a book about education alone. It is about a cultural impulse to justify pursuits that do not always garner immediate or quantifiable results in the real world. The book’s title refers to the early nineteenth-century world Keen recreates for us—a “Utilitarian Age” replete with fears that, as Thomas Carlyle put it, we are becoming “Mechanical in head and in heart” (“Signs of the Times,” Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, vol. 2 [James Munroe and Company, 1838], 150). But we too live in a “Utilitarian Age,” as Keen puts it, in which an “atmosphere of belligerent intolerance . . . has begun to erode the foundation of the public sphere that, however imperfect, remains crucial for any genuinely democratic society” (158). In our troubled present, the humanities might constitute a form of vital activism not through the promotion of specific precepts or practices, but rather by questioning what we think we know and facing what we do not. Kimberly J. Stern University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill","PeriodicalId":45845,"journal":{"name":"VICTORIAN STUDIES","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Edinburgh Companion to Anthony Trollope, edited by Frederik Van Dam, David Skilton, and Ortwin de Graef\",\"authors\":\"D. Morse\",\"doi\":\"10.2979/victorianstudies.64.3.09\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Periodical culture, steeped as it was in partisan politics, constitutes an important historical backdrop for the book. Keen’s staging of these debates is meticulously detailed while also marking out quarries of knowledge that have yet to be excavated. In chapter 3, for instance, Keen reflects on the pedagogical limitations of classical learning articulated by a critic in the Edinburgh Review (1802–1929) in a consideration of Robert Edgeworth’s Essays on Professional Education (1809). It would have been interesting to see Keen engage with the volume itself, for Edgeworth was a widely read and vocal proponent of practical education; while Edgeworth remarks that the “value of all knowledge must ultimately be decided by its utility,” these claims are also underwritten by an extensive literature appealing to the concept of learning by doing (Essays on Professional Education [J. Johnson, 1809], 371). Such omissions are regrettable, however, chiefly because they might affirm the idea that Keen already makes so convincingly: namely, that the history of these debates reveals how little we actually understand the terms that underlie our own sense of purpose as humanists. And this is not, moreover, a book about education alone. It is about a cultural impulse to justify pursuits that do not always garner immediate or quantifiable results in the real world. The book’s title refers to the early nineteenth-century world Keen recreates for us—a “Utilitarian Age” replete with fears that, as Thomas Carlyle put it, we are becoming “Mechanical in head and in heart” (“Signs of the Times,” Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, vol. 2 [James Munroe and Company, 1838], 150). But we too live in a “Utilitarian Age,” as Keen puts it, in which an “atmosphere of belligerent intolerance . . . has begun to erode the foundation of the public sphere that, however imperfect, remains crucial for any genuinely democratic society” (158). In our troubled present, the humanities might constitute a form of vital activism not through the promotion of specific precepts or practices, but rather by questioning what we think we know and facing what we do not. Kimberly J. 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The Edinburgh Companion to Anthony Trollope, edited by Frederik Van Dam, David Skilton, and Ortwin de Graef
Periodical culture, steeped as it was in partisan politics, constitutes an important historical backdrop for the book. Keen’s staging of these debates is meticulously detailed while also marking out quarries of knowledge that have yet to be excavated. In chapter 3, for instance, Keen reflects on the pedagogical limitations of classical learning articulated by a critic in the Edinburgh Review (1802–1929) in a consideration of Robert Edgeworth’s Essays on Professional Education (1809). It would have been interesting to see Keen engage with the volume itself, for Edgeworth was a widely read and vocal proponent of practical education; while Edgeworth remarks that the “value of all knowledge must ultimately be decided by its utility,” these claims are also underwritten by an extensive literature appealing to the concept of learning by doing (Essays on Professional Education [J. Johnson, 1809], 371). Such omissions are regrettable, however, chiefly because they might affirm the idea that Keen already makes so convincingly: namely, that the history of these debates reveals how little we actually understand the terms that underlie our own sense of purpose as humanists. And this is not, moreover, a book about education alone. It is about a cultural impulse to justify pursuits that do not always garner immediate or quantifiable results in the real world. The book’s title refers to the early nineteenth-century world Keen recreates for us—a “Utilitarian Age” replete with fears that, as Thomas Carlyle put it, we are becoming “Mechanical in head and in heart” (“Signs of the Times,” Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, vol. 2 [James Munroe and Company, 1838], 150). But we too live in a “Utilitarian Age,” as Keen puts it, in which an “atmosphere of belligerent intolerance . . . has begun to erode the foundation of the public sphere that, however imperfect, remains crucial for any genuinely democratic society” (158). In our troubled present, the humanities might constitute a form of vital activism not through the promotion of specific precepts or practices, but rather by questioning what we think we know and facing what we do not. Kimberly J. Stern University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
期刊介绍:
For more than 50 years, Victorian Studies has been devoted to the study of British culture of the Victorian age. It regularly includes interdisciplinary articles on comparative literature, social and political history, and the histories of education, philosophy, fine arts, economics, law and science, as well as review essays, and an extensive book review section. An annual cumulative and fully searchable bibliography of noteworthy publications that have a bearing on the Victorian period is available electronically and is included in the cost of a subscription. Victorian Studies Online Bibliography