Nature’s empire: the Darwinian idiom in late Victorian international thought
<p>This thesis explores the impact of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection on the international thought of late Victorian Britain. As the Darwinian revolution transformed Europe, so too did it prove generative of a new evolutionary idiom to theorise international relations...
Main Author: | Butcher, CE |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Keene, E |
Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2020
|
Subjects: |
Similar Items
-
Darwinism in global international thought, c.1859–1914
by: Butcher, C
Published: (2023) -
With many voices: the sea in Victorian fiction
by: Kerr, MPM
Published: (2013) -
The shape of things to come: global order and democracy in 1940s international thought
by: Macdonald, E
Published: (2016) -
The tyranny of the definite article: some thoughts on the art of intellectual history
by: Young, B
Published: (2002) -
Darwin and Reductionisms: Victorian, Neo-Darwinian and Postgenomic Biologies
by: Angelique Richardson
Published: (2010-10-01)