Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’

Scientists’ investigations into environmental issues often fail to promote political change unless those investigations are popularised in the public consciousness. We will illustrate this thesis through the work of Dickens and the pioneering physician, Dr John Snow. In Victorian London, Snow challe...

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Main Author: Wayne Melville et Philip V. Allingham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2012-06-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cve/12314
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author Wayne Melville et Philip V. Allingham
author_facet Wayne Melville et Philip V. Allingham
author_sort Wayne Melville et Philip V. Allingham
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description Scientists’ investigations into environmental issues often fail to promote political change unless those investigations are popularised in the public consciousness. We will illustrate this thesis through the work of Dickens and the pioneering physician, Dr John Snow. In Victorian London, Snow challenged the deeply held theory that miasmas caused diseases such as cholera. However, his investigations, now considered the foundation of modern epidemiology, were dismissed by the medical establishment. By 1884, his work had been verified. Contemporaneously, Dickens worked with early advocates of public health, Edwin Chadwick and his brother-in-law, Henry Austin, to promote and then defend the landmark 1848 Public Health Act. By 1850, however, the Public Health Act was being eviscerated, and Dickens attacked the vested interests he saw as opposed to public health. Fast forward to the present, and we see this history repeating itself in the issue of global warming. The science of global warming has been developing since the 1820s and is now well accepted, but serious political debates continue in North America over scientific uncertainty and the economic costs of tackling the problem.
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spelling doaj.art-728b00a34bb14f59a1b3f853538064f22023-01-04T11:26:02ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492012-06-0110.4000/cve.12314Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’Wayne Melville et Philip V. AllinghamScientists’ investigations into environmental issues often fail to promote political change unless those investigations are popularised in the public consciousness. We will illustrate this thesis through the work of Dickens and the pioneering physician, Dr John Snow. In Victorian London, Snow challenged the deeply held theory that miasmas caused diseases such as cholera. However, his investigations, now considered the foundation of modern epidemiology, were dismissed by the medical establishment. By 1884, his work had been verified. Contemporaneously, Dickens worked with early advocates of public health, Edwin Chadwick and his brother-in-law, Henry Austin, to promote and then defend the landmark 1848 Public Health Act. By 1850, however, the Public Health Act was being eviscerated, and Dickens attacked the vested interests he saw as opposed to public health. Fast forward to the present, and we see this history repeating itself in the issue of global warming. The science of global warming has been developing since the 1820s and is now well accepted, but serious political debates continue in North America over scientific uncertainty and the economic costs of tackling the problem.http://journals.openedition.org/cve/12314
spellingShingle Wayne Melville et Philip V. Allingham
Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
title Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’
title_full Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’
title_fullStr Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’
title_full_unstemmed Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’
title_short Snow and Dickens: The Victorian ‘Inconvenient Truth’
title_sort snow and dickens the victorian inconvenient truth
url http://journals.openedition.org/cve/12314
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