Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-xtgtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T10:13:13.541Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

THE COMMON WORLD: HISTORIES OF SCIENCE AND DOMESTIC INTIMACY*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2014

DEBORAH R. COEN*
Affiliation:
Department of History, Barnard College E-mail: dcoen@barnard.edu

Extract

Let us begin by considering a series of letters written in 1863 by Max Vigne, a humble imperial surveyor in India, to his wife at home in England. In the course of his affectionate and finely observed correspondence, Vigne comes to think of himself for the first time as a naturalist. He recounts his growing fascination with botany, particularly the new field of plant geography, and he expresses a keen desire to share this new knowledge—and his newfound identity—with his faraway wife, Clara.

Everything I am seeing and doing is so new . . . When I lie down to sleep everything spins in my brain. I can only make sense of my life the way I have made sense of everything, since we first met: by describing it to you. That great gift you have always had of listening, asking such excellent questions—when I tell you enough to let you imagine me clearly, then I can imagine myself.

In these lines Vigne is proposing what might strike us at first as a surprising connection between scientific observation and private life. He seems to derive his standard of clear description—the backbone of his scientific work as a naturalist—not from professional norms or philosophical reflections, but rather from an ideal of intimacy. In subsequent letters Vigne makes clear that his study of the geographical relations among plants is part of a more personal quest for knowledge: an attempt to make sense of the persistence of his own identity during his transformative experiences of travel. “Only now do I begin to grasp the principles of growth and change in the plants I learned to name in the woods, those we have grown at home—there is a science to this. Something that transcends mere identification.” He likens the plant's essential and enduring form to the bond he shares with Clara:

The point, dear heart, is that through all these transformations one can still discern the original morphology; the original character is altered yet not lost. In our separation our lives are changing, our bond to each other is changing. Yet still we are essentially the same.

These letters never reached Vigne's wife, because neither he, nor Clara, nor the letters themselves ever really existed. They are fictions, penned not by a nineteenth-century naturalist but by the twenty-first-century novelist, Andrea Barrett. Why begin a historiographical essay with fiction? In part because in very few cases have historians yet gone to the trouble of reconstructing such profound resonances between familial and scientific experiences. As historians, we are not yet sure how to read domestic documents as sources for the history of knowledge production. “Flimsy lists of things to do, large parchment mortgages, ‘private letters of no consequence’”—these are among the historical documents that we need to learn to read for their clues to intellectual history.

Type
Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The author thanks the editors, Paul White, and audiences at Northwestern and the Centre Alexandre Koyré for helpful suggestions.

References

1 Barrett, Andrea, Servants of the Map (New York, 2002), 26Google Scholar, 30, original emphases. Much of Barrett's oeuvre explores the very different emotional worlds of nineteenth-century naturalists and present-day scientists; for this contrast, see, for example, the short story “The Forest” in Servants of the Map.

2 Rothschild, Emma, The Inner Life of Empires (Princeton, 2011), 279Google Scholar.

3 On cognition and the emotions see Nussbaum, Martha, Upheavals of Thought: The Intelligence of Emotions (Cambridge, 2001)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 Ginzburg, Carlo, “Family Resemblances and Family Trees: Two Cognitive Metaphors,” Critical Inquiry, 30/3 (Spring 2004), 537CrossRefGoogle Scholar–56, 537.

5 Galton, Francis celebrated his own ancestry in English Men of Science (London, 1874)Google Scholar.

6 Waugh, Alexander, The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War (London, 2008)Google Scholar; Reitter, Paul, “Fin-de-siècle Vienna and the Challenge of Family Biography,” American Imago, 68/4 (Winter 2011), 665CrossRefGoogle Scholar–78, 677.

7 Algazi, Gadi, “Scholars in Households: Refiguring the Learned Habitus, 1480–1550,” Science in Context, 16/1–2 (2003)Google Scholar, Scientific Personae special issue, edited by Lorraine Daston and Otto Sibum, 9–42.

8 Schiebinger, Londa, The Mind Has No Sex? Women in the Origins of Modern Science (Cambridge, MA, 1989), 156Google Scholar.

9 White, Paul, Thomas Huxley: Making the Man of Science (Cambridge, 2002), 10CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

10 Johnson, Christopher and Sabean, David, eds., Sibling Relations and the Transformations of European Kinship, 1300–1900 (New York, 2011)Google Scholar.

11 Hoskin, Michael, Discoverers of the Universe: William and Caroline Herschel (Princeton, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Roth, Günther, Max Webers deutsch-englische Familiengeschichte 1800–1950 (Tübingen, 2001)Google Scholar; Kuper, Adam, Incest and Influence: The Private Life of Bourgeois England (Cambridge, MA, 2009); Deborah R. Coen, Vienna in the Age of Uncertainty: Science, Liberalism, and Private Life (Chicago, 2007)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 E.g. Nye, Mary Jo, “Aristocratic Culture and the Pursuit of Science: The de Broglies in Modern France,” Isis, 88 (1997), 397421Google Scholar; Staffan Bergwik, “An Assemblage of Science and Home: The Gendered Lifestyle of Svante Arrhenius,” forthcoming in Science as Culture.

13 White, Huxley, 8. On the scientist's socialization at home see too Kohler, Robert, “From Farm and Family to Career Naturalist: The Apprenticeship of Vernon Bailey,” Isis, 99/1 (2008), 2856CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

14 Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space, trans. Maria Jolas (New York, 1994), 6.

15 What is more, it was not uncommon for newly professionalized research groups in the natural sciences to structure themselves explicitly as families. As Laura Otis has shown, the students of physiologist Johannes Müller in nineteenth-century Berlin understood their relationships with Müller and with each other according to the genre of “family romance,” with all the attendant emotional extremes and intricacies. Otis, Laura, Müller's Lab (Oxford, 2007)Google Scholar.

16 Richards, Joan, Angles of Reflection (New York, 2000), 267Google Scholar; for De Morgan's epistemology see 243.

17 Ibid., 245.

18 Ibid., 270.

19 Pycior, Helena Mary, Slack, Nancy G., and Abir Am, Pnina G., eds., Creative Couples in the Sciences (New Brunswick, 1996)Google Scholar.

20 Lykknes, Annette, Opitz, Donald L., and Van Tiggelen, Brigitte, eds., For Better or For Worse? Collaborative Couples in the Sciences (Basel, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

21 Levine, Emily, “PanDora, or Erwin and Dora Panofsky and the Private History of Ideas,” Journal of Modern History, 83/4 (Dec. 2011), 753–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22 White, Paul, “Darwin's Emotions: The Scientific Self and the Sentiment of Objectivity,” Isis, 100/4 (Dec. 2009), 811CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed–26, 812.

23 White, “Darwin's Emotions,” 817.

24 Randolph, John, “‘That Historical Family’: The Bakunin Archive and the Intimate Theater of History in Imperial Russia, 1780–1925,” Russian Review, 63/4 (2004), 574–93, 591CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 Randolph, John, The House in the Garden: The Bakunin Family and the Romance of Russian Idealism (Ithaca, 2007), 23Google Scholar, 38, 66.

26 Ibid., 51

27 Ibid., 245.

28 Ibid., 150.

29 Compare White, Paul, “Lives and Letters: Correspondence and Public Character in the Nineteenth Century,” in Crone, R., ed., New Perspectives in British Cultural History (Newcastle upon Tyne, 2007), 192202Google Scholar.

30 Randolph, The House in the Garden, 228.

31 Hull, Isabel, Sexuality, State, and Civil Society in Germany: 1700 – 1815 (Ithaca, NY, 1997)Google Scholar, La Vopa, Anthony, “Thinking about Marriage: Kant's Liberalism and the Peculiar Morality of Conjugal Union,” Journal of Modern History, 77/1 (March 2005), 134CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

32 Randolph, The House in the Garden, 65.

33 Rothschild, Emma, The Inner Life of Empires: An Eighteenth-Century History (Princeton, 2011), 8Google Scholar.

34 Ibid., 262.

35 Ibid., 237.

36 Ibid., 283.

37 Ibid., 274.

38 Cohen, Deborah, Family Secrets: Shame and Privacy in Modern Britain (Oxford, 2013), 5Google Scholar.

39 For the history of the critical reception of the novel see Astrida Orle Tantillo, Goethe’s Elective Affinities and the Critics (Rochester, 2001). Stefani Engelstein's reading of the novel in relation to Goethe's morphology is discussed below. For a different reading of the relationship between Goethe's natural philosophy and his emotional life see Richards, Robert J., The Romantic Conception of Life: Science and Philosophy in the Age of Goethe (Chicago, 2002), 325406CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

40 Lewes, George, The Life and Works of Goethe, vol. 2 (London, 1855), 372Google Scholar.

41 Hull, Sexuality, State, and Civil Society in Germany; Hunt, Lynn, The Family Romance of the French Revolution (Berkeley, 1992)Google Scholar; La Vopa, Anthony, Fichte: The Self and the Calling of Philosophy, 1762–1799 (Cambridge, 2001)Google Scholar; Engelstein, Stefani, “Civic Attachments & Sibling Attractions: The Shadows of Fraternity,” Goethe Yearbook, 18 (2011), 205–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

42 von Goethe, Johann Wolfgang, Elective Affinities, trans. Hollingdale, R. J. (Penguin, 1971), 67Google Scholar.

43 Ibid., 49.

44 Ibid., 164.

45 Quoted in Engelstein, “Civic Attachments,” 217, my translation.

46 Goethe, Elective Affinities, 163.

47 von Goethe, Johann Wolfgang, Die Schriften zur Naturwissenschaft, ed. Kuhn, Dorothea, vol. 10 (Vienna, 2004), 7487Google Scholar, my translation.

48 E.g. von Goethe, Johann Wolfgang, “The Purpose Set Forth,” in Goethe, Scientific Studies, ed. and trans. Miller, Douglas (Princeton, 1988), 63–6Google Scholar, 63.

49 Goethe, Elective Affinities, 56.

50 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, “The Enterprise Justified,” in Goethe, Scientific Studies, 61–2, 61, added emphasis.

51 Engelstein, Stefani, Anxious Anatomy: The Conception of the Human Form in Literary and Naturalist Discourse (Albany, 2008), 57Google Scholar, 58.

52 Goethe, Elective Affinities, 215–16.

53 Daston, Lorraine and Vidal, Fernando, eds., The Moral Authority of Nature (Chicago, 2003)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

54 Bollas, Christopher, Shadow of the Object: Psychoanalysis of the Unthought Known (New York, 1987)Google Scholar.

55 Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought, 78.

56 We might even find that the sciences have been shaped in surprising ways by certain influential families, like those considered here—as does Davidoff, Leonore in “The Legacy of the Nineteenth-Century Bourgeois Family and the Wool Merchant's Son,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 14 (2004), 2546Google Scholar.

57 Arendt, Hannah, The Human Condition (Chicago, 1998), 57CrossRefGoogle Scholar.