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Abstract
‘Before Einstein’ brings together previous scholarship in the field of nineteenth-century literature and science and greatly expands upon it, offering the first book-length study of not only the scientific and cultural context of the spatial fourth dimension, but also the literary value of four-dimensional theory. In addition to providing close critical analysis of Charles Howard Hinton’s Scientific Romances (1884–1896), ‘Before Einstein’ examines the work of H. G. Wells, Henry James and William James through the lens of four-dimensional theory. The primary value of Hinton’s work has always been its literary and philosophical content and influence, rather than its scientific authority. It is certain that significant late nineteenth-century writers and thinkers such as H. G. Wells, William James, Olive Schreiner, Karl Pearson and W. E. B. Du Bois read Hinton. Others, including Henry James, Joseph Conrad and Ford Madox Ford, were familiar with his ideas. Hinton’s fourth dimension appealed to scientists, spiritualists and artists, and – particularly at the end of the nineteenth century – the interests of these different groups often overlapped. Truly interdisciplinary in scope, ‘Before Einstein’ breaks new ground by offering an extensive analysis of four-dimensional theory's place in the shared history of Modernism.
This lively and daring book connects several socio-historical threads in late-nineteenth-century Anglo-American culture. Most importantly, how did the idea of the fourth dimension pass from the field of analytical geometry to that of fiction, psychology, and aesthetics?'
—Kate Holerhoff 'English Literature in Transition 1880–1920', Vol 61, No. 3, pp. 396–399.
Elizabeth Throesch received her PhD from the University of Leeds in 2007. She has published articles and book chapters on Lewis Carroll, Herbert Spencer and Charles Howard Hinton, among others.
‘This is among the most innovative studies of the relationships between literature and science, yielding wholly fresh understandings of modernist culture while its attention to the neglected figure of Hinton marks a major advance in scholarship.’ —Ian F. A. Bell, Professor of American Literature, School of Humanities, Keele University, UK
‘Before Einstein nicely consolidates and extends scholarly discussion on the spatial fourth dimension as it moves through physics, mathematics, literature and art. The study presents a compelling historical treatment of one of the most fascinating chapters of Anglo-American aesthetics at the turn of the twentieth century.’ —Bruce Clarke, Paul Whitfield Horn Professor of Literature and Science, Texas Tech University, USA
‘Before Einstein’ examines the discourse of hyperspace philosophy and its position within the network of ‘new’ ideas at the end of the nineteenth century. Hyperspace philosophy grew out of the concept of a fourth spatial dimension, an idea that became increasingly debated amongst mathematicians, physicists and philosophers during the 1870s and 80s. English mathematician and hyperspace philosopher Charles Howard Hinton was the chief populariser of the fourth dimension in Europe and North America. The influence of his writings, many of which were published as a series under the title of ‘Scientific Romances’, ranged surprisingly wide.
‘Before Einstein’ offers, for the first time, an extended examination of Hinton’s work and – crucially – the influence of his ideas on contemporary writers and thinkers. Increasingly over the past three decades, critical attention has been given to the relevance of pre-Einsteinian theories of the fourth dimension within the shifting aesthetic and cultural values at the turn of the twentieth century. For the first time in a full-length literary study, ‘Before Einstein’ addresses the cultural life of the fourth dimension at the turn of the century. ‘Before Einstein’ begins by tracing the development of spatial theories of the fourth dimension out of the ‘new’, non-Euclidean geometries of the mid-nineteenth century, and proceeds to analyse Hinton’s role as four-dimensional theorist and populariser of hyperspace philosophy. Hinton's ‘Scientific Romances’ are examined in detail, not simply as documents of interest for historians of science and ideas, but for their intrinsic literary value as well. Additionally, ‘Before Einstein’ captures the work of H. G. Wells, Henry James and William James through the lens of Hinton’s writing, identifying what can be described as a four-dimensional literary aesthetic. The book addresses the existing gap in literary studies of the fourth dimension, while also providing scholars of the James brothers and Wells with new ways of approaching their subject matter.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover 1 | ||
Front Matter | i | ||
Half-title | i | ||
Series information | ii | ||
Title page | iii | ||
Copyright information | iv | ||
Table of contents | v | ||
Acknowledgments | vii | ||
Introduction | 1 | ||
Part I Reading the Fourth Dimension | 17 | ||
Chapter (1-3) | 17 | ||
Chapter One Imagining ‘Something Perfectly New’: Problems of Language, Conception and Perception | 19 | ||
The New Geometries | 20 | ||
The Dimensional Analogy | 24 | ||
Before Hinton: The Fourth Dimension 1846–1880 | 26 | ||
Hinton’s Early Influences | 32 | ||
The Ruskinian Imagination | 37 | ||
Hinton’s Hyperspace Philosophy | 40 | ||
Chapter Two Constructing the Fourth Dimension: The First Series of the Scientific Romances | 45 | ||
‘What Is the Fourth Dimension?’ | 48 | ||
Victorian Thermodynamics and the Fourth Dimension | 53 | ||
‘The Persian King; or, the Law of the Valley’ | 57 | ||
‘Casting Out the Self’ | 67 | ||
Chapter Three The Four-Dimensional Self: Personal, Political and Untimely | 75 | ||
The Hintonians | 77 | ||
Gendered Temporality | 82 | ||
Stella as Experiment | 83 | ||
Untimely and Invisible | 87 | ||
Nietzsche, the ‘Disadvantages’ of the Past and An Unfinished Communication | 91 | ||
‘Unlearning’ | 95 | ||
Eternal Recurrence in Nietzsche and Hinton | 97 | ||
Part II Reading Through the Fourth Dimension | 105 | ||
Chapter (4-6) | 107 | ||
Chapter Four Four-Dimensional Consciousness: The Correspondence Between William James and Charles Howard Hinton | 107 | ||
The Hinton–James Correspondence | 109 | ||
The Fourth Dimension as Conjunctive Relations | 114 | ||
‘A Moving Consciousness’ in William James and Hinton | 118 | ||
William James and the Heroic Will-to-Attention | 122 | ||
Hinton, James and Fechner’s ‘Mother-Sea’ of Consciousness | 126 | ||
Chapter Five H. G. Wells’S Four-Dimensional Literary Aesthetic | 133 | ||
Four-Dimensional Invention | 134 | ||
The Other Invisible Protagonist | 137 | ||
‘An “Habeas Corpus” of an Uncanny Source’ | 145 | ||
Wells’s Splintering Frame Technique and ‘Cubist Visual Culture’ | 151 | ||
Disruption and Disunity in The Invisible Man | 155 | ||
The Spoils of Boon | 160 | ||
Chapter Six Exceeding ‘The Trap Of The Reflexive’: Henry James’s Dimensions of Consciousness | 167 | ||
The Spiralling Consciousness in Henry James | 169 | ||
The Spoils of Poynton (1896–1897) | 173 | ||
‘The Great Good Place’ (1900) | 177 | ||
Henry James and ‘Aesthetic Time’ | 184 | ||
‘The Jolly Corner’ (1908) | 185 | ||
‘A Kind of Fourth Dimension’ in Henry James | 193 | ||
Afterword | 1 | ||
End Matter | 199 | ||
Bibliography | 199 | ||
Index | 209 |