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  • Cited by 17
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
March 2010
Print publication year:
2007
Online ISBN:
9780511660283

Book description

In the Victorian period English universities were transformed beyond recognition, and the modern academic profession began to take shape. Mark Pattison was one of the foremost Oxford dons in this crucial period, and articulated a distinctive vision of the academic's vocation frequently at odds with those of his contemporaries. In the first serious study of Pattison as a thinker, Stuart Jones shows his importance in the cultural and intellectual life of the time: as a proponent of the German idea of the university, as a follower of Newman who became an agnostic and a thoroughly secular intellectual, and as a pioneer in the study of the history of ideas. Pattison is now remembered (misleadingly) as the supposed prototype for Mr Casaubon in George Eliot's Middlemarch, but this book retrieves his status as one of the most original and self-conscious of Victorian intellectuals.

Reviews

'H. S. Jones wrote the excellent entry on Mark Pattison for the New Dictionary of National Biography, and now he has written a lengthier study not on what he did but what he thought. … Jones shows that the over-simplified picture of Pattison … has to be revised …'

Source: Oxford Magazine

'This is an elegant and persuasive biography written with economy and clarity that brings to life a neglected and much maligned mid-Victorian essayist.'

Source: The American Historical Review

'This is an intriguing and important group…'

Source: Journal of Interdisciplinary History

'Stuart Jones has produced a first-rate intellectual biography of one of the most formidable intellectual figures in nineteenth-century Britain…'

Source: Journal of Ecclesiastical History

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Contents

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