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dc.contributor.authorShuttleworth, Sallyen_GB
dc.contributor.authorDawson, Gowanen_GB
dc.contributor.authorNoakes, Richarden_GB
dc.date.accessioned2014-08-21T15:35:17Z
dc.date.issued2001
dc.description.abstractThe Victorian periodical press offers unique insights into many diverse areas of nineteenth-century experience, and the complex relations between gender, science and culture in particular, yet it has been consistently marginalized as a primary resource in academic study. The Science in the Nineteenth-century Periodical (SciPer) project at the universities of Sheffield and Leeds is creating a new point of access to a wide range of non-specialist periodicals across the century by means of a fully searchable electronic index. By detailing the entire contents of each journal, and not just those articles that have a clear scientific relevance, it becomes clear that science formed a fundamental and integral part of nineteenth-century culture. The electronic index, moreover, will include hypertext cross-reference links that will allow the user to identify a dialogic pattern of encounters between ostensibly diverse articles, rather than only to browse in a simple chronological mode. By adopting this innovative approach, the SciPer database will reveal the manifold intertextual relations between the fictional works of women writers like Elizabeth Gaskell and the scientific articles that often appeared in the pages of the same magazines, and will show that writers of both sexes and across several different genres actively engaged in vibrant interdisciplinary debates concerning scientific issues in a forum provided by the periodical. Although the SciPer database itself is not specifically focused on issues of gender, the index will include several periodicals aimed explicitly at a female readership and, by providing access to titles still rarely utilized in modern scholarship, it will offer further insights into the important contemporary debates about women and science, as well as the more subtle ways, in which gendered imagery was employed within scientific discourse. This article details some critical findings from Punch , The English Womans Domestic Magazine , Cornhill Magazine and the Review of Reviews .en_GB
dc.identifier.citationVol. 12(1), pp. 57 - 70en_GB
dc.identifier.doi10.1080/09574040110034129
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10871/15373
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherTaylor & Francisen_GB
dc.subjectVictorian Periodicalsen_GB
dc.subjectCornhill Magazineen_GB
dc.subjectDarwinen_GB
dc.subjectEvolutionen_GB
dc.subjectGenderen_GB
dc.subjectPunchen_GB
dc.subjectDomesticen_GB
dc.subjectMagazineen_GB
dc.subjectPeriodicalsen_GB
dc.subjectReviewsen_GB
dc.subjectScienceen_GB
dc.subjectEnglishwoman'sen_GB
dc.titleWomen, Science, and Culture: Science and the Nineteenth-Century Periodicalen_GB
dc.typeArticleen_GB
dc.date.available2014-08-21T15:35:17Z
dc.identifier.issn0957-4042
dc.descriptionpublication-status: Publisheden_GB
dc.descriptiontypes: Articleen_GB
dc.descriptionArticle is post-print version.en_GB
dc.descriptionThis is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Women: a cultural review on January 2001, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/09574040110034129en_GB
dc.identifier.journalWomen: A Cultural Reviewen_GB


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