Description
About the Author
Dr John Holmes is Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Reading. He is the author of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the Late Victorian Sonnet-Sequence: Sexuality, Belief and the Self (Ashgate, 2005) and the co-editor of Horae Amoris: The Collected Poems of Rosa Newmarch (Rivendale, 2010). From 2006 to 2008 he held a Leverhulme Research Fellowship working on Darwin, poetry and poetics.
Reviews
John Holmes's coverage of the relationship between science and poetry in Darwin's Bards: British and American Poetry in the Age of Evolution is remarkably complete. He has a scientist's grasp of evolutionary theory and a thorough understanding of the controversies the theory has engendered. He also understands the difficulty many have had in finding meaning in an existence framed by Darwinism. Holmes's investigation of how poetry addresses these problems is unique, and he is correct in thinking that, "poems can even change how we think about Darwinism itself." Evolutionary science provides many of the details for understanding why the world is the way it is, but we need "Darwin's Bards" to help us interpret these details, incorporate them into our collective consciousness, and fully understand what it means to live in a Darwinian world. -- Douglas Shedd, Thoresen Professor of Biology, Randolph College Darwin's Bards is a bracing, original and exciting contribution to our understanding and appreciation of the cultural impact of Darwinism; indeed, John Holmes is to be commended for writing an exhilarating and genuinely interdisciplinary study with revealing insights on every page. -- Roger Ebbatson The Thomas Hardy Journal Darwin's Bards affords subtle, precise, sharp-eyed readings of verse by such well-known Victorian poets as Tennyson, Browning, Meredith, Swinburne and Hardy, as well as more recent poems by the likes of Ted Hughes, Philip Appleman and Thom Gunn. Each of these poets, Holmes argues, grapples with the fundamental, largely unchanging challenges posed by Darwinian evolution, with the book's chapters each focusing on topics including theology, death and immortality, humanity's cosmic insignificance and relationship with other animals, and sex and reproduction! the detailed analysis of verse that deals with these issues often yields fresh insights that will be of interest to more historically minded critics. -- Gowan Dawson, University of Leicester British Journal for the History of Science Darwin's Bards is a welcome study. Holmes has selected a bold and expansive topic, one that needed the careful attention that he has shown it ... No doubt we will hear more about Darwin among the poets (it is to be hoped that we do), and Holmes will have provided this narrative with a fitting point of origin. -- Jason David Hall, University of Exeter The British Society for Literature and Science 'Rich and meticulous analyses ... Darwin's Bards is important not only because it engages oft-overlooked evolutionary poetry, but because its critical discussions provide us with a heretofore missing link in Darwinian literary criticism; in so doing, they give us new views of our Darwinian realities.' -- Janine Rogers, Mount Allison University Review of English Studies Poetry makes evolution conceivable, letting the ear and the imagination know that which the mind struggles to grasp. With its fine ear for poetry's engagement with the science of its age, Darwin's Bards contributes to this work, encouraging an alertness to and enjoyment of the poetry of evolution. -- Anna Barton, University of Sheffield Tennyson Research Bulletin
Book Information
ISBN 9780748639403
Author John Holmes
Format Hardback
Page Count 304
Imprint Edinburgh University Press
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Weight(grams) 598g