词条 | Grant Allen |
释义 |
| name = Grant Allen | image = Portrait of Grant Allen.jpg | image_size = | alt = | caption = Portrait of Grant Allen, by Elliott & Fry | birth_name = Charles Grant Blairfindie Allen | birth_date = {{birth date|1848|2|24|df=yes}} | birth_place = Kingston, Canada West | death_date = {{death date and age|1899|10|25|1848|2|24|df=yes}} | death_place = Hindhead, Haslemere, England | resting_place = | resting_place_coordinates = | nationality = Canadian | citizenship = | education = | alma_mater = Oxford| | notableworks = The Woman Who Did The Evolution of the Idea of God The British Barbarians | occupation = Writer | spouses = Caroline Anne Bootheway (1868-1872; her death) Ellen Jerrard (1873-1899; his death) | children = Jerrard Grant Allen | relations = | awards = | signature = | signature_alt = | footnotes = }}Charles Grant Blairfindie Allen (February 24, 1848{{spaced ndash}}October 25, 1899) was a Canadian science writer and novelist, and a public promoter of Evolution in the second half of the 19th century. [1] BiographyEarly life and educationAllen was born near Kingston, Canada West (known as Ontario after Confederation), the second son of Catharine Ann Grant and the Rev. Joseph Antisell Allen, a Protestant minister from Dublin, Ireland.[2] His mother was a daughter of the fifth Baron de Longueuil. Allen was educated at home until, at age 13, he and his parents moved to the United States, then to France, and finally to the United Kingdom.[3] He was educated at King Edward's School in Birmingham and at Merton College in Oxford, both in the United Kingdom.[4] After graduation, Allen studied in France, taught at Brighton College in 1870–71, and in his mid-twenties became a professor at Queen's College, a black college in Jamaica. Despite being the son of a minister, Allen became an atheist and a socialist. Writing careerAfter leaving his professorship, in 1876 he returned to England, where he turned his talents to writing, gaining a reputation for his essays on science and for literary works. A 2007 book by Oliver Sacks cites with approval one of Allen's early articles, "Note-Deafness" (a description of what became known as amusia, published in 1878 in the learned journal Mind).[5] Allen's first books dealt with scientific subjects, and include Physiological Æsthetics (1877) and Flowers and Their Pedigrees (1886). He was first influenced by associationist psychology as expounded by Alexander Bain and by Herbert Spencer, the latter often considered{{by whom|date=November 2015}} the most important individual in the transition from associationist psychology to Darwinian functionalism. In Allen's many articles on flowers and on perception in insects, Darwinian arguments replaced the old Spencerian terms, leading to a radically new vision of plant life that influenced H.G. Wells and helped transform later botanical research.[6] On a personal level, a long friendship that started when Allen met Spencer on his return from Jamaica grew uneasy over the years. Allen wrote a critical and revealing biographical article on Spencer that was published after Spencer's death. After assisting Sir W. W. Hunter with his Gazetteer of India in the early 1880s, Allen turned his attention to fiction, and between 1884 and 1899 produced about 30 novels. In 1895, his scandalous book titled The Woman Who Did, promulgating certain startling views on marriage and kindred questions, became a bestseller. The book told the story of an independent woman who has a child out of wedlock.[7] In his career, Allen wrote two novels under female pseudonyms. One of these, the short novel The Type-writer Girl, he wrote under the name Olive Pratt Rayner. Another work, The Evolution of the Idea of God (1897), propounds a theory of religion on heterodox lines comparable to Herbert Spencer's "ghost theory".[8] Allen's theory became well known and brief references to it appear in a review by Marcel Mauss, Durkheim's nephew, in the articles of William James and in the works of Sigmund Freud. The young G. K. Chesterton wrote on what he considered the flawed premise of the idea, arguing that the idea of God preceded human mythologies, rather than developing from them. Chesterton said of Allen's book on the evolution of the idea of God: "it would be much more interesting if God wrote a book on the evolution of the idea of Grant Allen".[9] Allen also became a pioneer in science fiction, with the novel The British Barbarians (1895). This book, published about the same time as H. G. Wells's The Time Machine (which appeared January–May 1895, and which includes a mention of Allen[3][10]), also described time travel, although the plot is quite different. Allen's short story The Thames Valley Catastrophe (published December 1897 in The Strand Magazine) describes the destruction of London by a sudden and massive volcanic eruption. Ancestry{{ahnentafel|collapsed=yes |align=center |boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc; |boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9; |boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc; |boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc; |boxstyle_5=background-color: #9fe; |1= 1. Charles Grant Blairfindie Allen |2= 2. Joseph Antisell Allen |3= 3. Catharine Ann Grant |4= 4. Henry Francis Allen |5= 5. Eliza Josephine Antisell |6= 6. Charles William Grant, 5th Baron de Longueuil |7= 7. Caroline Coffin |10= 10. Joseph Antisell |11= 11. Elizabeth Gilbert |12= 12. David Alexander Grant |13= 13. Marie-Charles Le Moyne, 4th Baroness de Longueuil |14= 14. John Coffin |15= 15. Anne Matthews |20= 20. Christopher Antisell |21= 21. Anne Palmer |24= 24. David Grant |25= 25. Elizabeth Richardson |26= 26. Charles-Jacques Le Moyne, 3rd Baron de Longueuil |27= 27. Marie-Anne Catherine Fleury |28= 28. Nathaniel Coffin |29= 29. Elizabeth Barnes |30= 30. William Matthews |31= 31. Anne Radcliffe Wilson }} Personal lifeAllen married twice and had one son, Jerrard Grant Allen (1878-1946), a theatrical agent/manager who in 1913 married the actress and singer Violet Englefield. They had a son, Reginald "Reggie" Grant Allen (1910-1985).{{citation needed|date=January 2017}} In 1893 Allen left London for the hills around the Devil's Punch Bowl, enthusing on the advantages of the change of scene: "Up here on the free hills, the sharp air blows in upon us, limpid and clear from a thousand leagues of open ocean; down there in the stagnant town, it stagnates and ferments".[11] Death and posthumous publicationGrant Allen died of liver cancer at his home on Hindhead, Haslemere, Surrey, England, on October 25, 1899.[12] He died before finishing Hilda Wade. The novel's final episode, which he dictated to his friend, doctor and neighbor Sir Arthur Conan Doyle from his bed, appeared under the appropriate title, "The Episode of the Dead Man Who Spoke" in the Strand Magazine, in 1900. LegacyMany histories of detective fiction mention Allen as an innovator. The illustrious Colonel Clay is a precursor of other gentleman rogue characters; he notably bears a strong resemblance to Maurice Leblanc's Arsène Lupin, introduced some years later, and both Miss Cayley's Adventures and Hilda Wade feature early female detectives. The Scene of the Crime Festival, an annual festival celebrating Canadian mystery fiction, takes place annually on Wolfe Island, Ontario, near Kingston, Allen's birthplace and honors Allen.[13] Partial bibliography
Selected articles
Further reading
Sources
References1. ^{{ cite web | url=http://www.online-literature.com/grant-allen/ | title=Grant Allen Biography | website=The Literature Network| accessdate=September 26, 2013 }} 2. ^{{cite book|author=Rand, Theodore H. |date=1900|title=Treasury of Canadian Verse|location= New York|publisher= Dutton|page= 387}} 3. ^1 {{cite book | editor = John Robert Colombo | editor-link = John Robert Colombo | title = Other Canadas An Anthology of Science Fiction and Fantasy | year = 1979 | publisher = McGraw-Hill Ryerson | isbn = 0-07-082953-5 | page = 30 | chapter = Grant Allen – The Child of the Phalanstery}} 4. ^{{cite book |last= Head |first= Dominic |title= The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English |pages= 19 |publisher= Cambridge University Press |year= 2006 |isbn= 0-521-83179-2}} 5. ^{{cite book| last1 = Sacks| first1 = Oliver| author-link1 = Oliver Sacks| year= 2007| title = Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=7IRrdwzhrZ8C| publisher= Pan Macmillan| publication-date= 2011| isbn = 9780330471138| accessdate = 2015-11-29| quote = The first extended description of amusia in the medical literature was an 1878 paper by Grant Allen in the journal Mind [...] Allen's lengthy paper included a superb case of a young man whom he had 'abundant opportunities of observing and experimenting upon' - the sort of detailed case study that established experimental neurology and psychology in the latter part of the nineteenth century.}} 6. ^{{cite journal|last1=Endersby|first1=Jim|title=Deceived by orchids: sex, science, fiction and Darwin|journal=The British Journal for the History of Science|date=2016|volume=49|issue=02|pages=205–229|doi=10.1017/S0007087416000352}} 7. ^{{cite journal|author=Cameron, Brooke |date=2008|title= Grant Allen’s The Woman Who Did: Spencerian Individualism and Teaching New Women to Be Mothers|work=English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920|volume=51|number= 3|pages= 281–301}} 8. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/477043?journalCode=amerjtheo |title=Review of The Evolution of the Idea of God by Grant Allen |work=The Journal of Religion|date= January 1899}} 9. ^{{cite book|author=Chesterton, G.K.|date=1926|title=The Everlasting Man|location= London|publisher= Hodder and Stoughton|page= 20}} 10. ^Chapter V of the Heinemann text and Chapter VII of the Holt text 11. ^Quoted in Richard Mabey, Dreams of the Good Life (Penguin 2015) p. 47-8 12. ^{{cite ODNB|last= Van Arsdel|first= Rosemary T.|title= Allen, (Charles) Grant Blairfindie (1848–1899)|id=373|date= October 2005}} 13. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.sceneofthecrime.ca/ |title='Scene of the Crime' Festival Honoring Grant Allen}}
External links{{wikisource author}}{{Commons category}}
17 : 1848 births|1899 deaths|Canadian agnostics|Canadian science writers|Canadian male novelists|Canadian non-fiction writers|Writers from Kingston, Ontario|Canadian people of English descent|Canadian people of Irish descent|Charles Darwin biographers|Male feminists|Pre-Confederation Ontario people|Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)|19th-century Canadian novelists|Alumni of Merton College, Oxford|Deaths from liver cancer|19th-century male writers |
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