Dickens and Heredity: When Like Begets Like [Book Review]

Isis 93 (1):136-137 (2002)
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Abstract

The opening chapter of this work is a comprehensive “Historical Overview of the Hereditary Puzzle.” Goldie Morgentaler's analysis of theories of heredity before Mendel will interest students of biological science. She admits that “resurrecting such theories without contamination from subsequent knowledge often requires an imaginative leap.” Very true. There have been such profound advances in the science of genetics since that time, with the avalanche of discoveries during the past half century, that much of the previous thought now falls in the realm of philosophical fantasy.These early concepts were those to which Charles Dickens was exposed for most of his life. His literary reaction to them is exhaustively analyzed in the subsequent two parts of the book. The first of these is entitled “Heredity and the Individual,” and the second is “The Public Face of Heredity.” The latter includes interesting discussion of class and race, with analyses of the last three novels. These indicate that Dickens's views on heredity changed during his later life, perhaps influenced by Darwin, whose work he had read … and vice versa.The author is to be admired for her detailed knowledge of Dickens's works and his characters. For a reviewer who has been steeped in evidence‐based medicine and science for most of his career, it seems that much of the speculation regarding heredity in the nineteenth century is tenuous and far‐fetched. While Dickens engaged the topic of heredity many times, he appears to have followed the general trend of that era by showing little consistency in his views. This is not surprising in light of the paucity of scientific evidence at that time.While the title implies a study of Dickens and heredity, the substance covers a much wider field, with ventures into ethics, morality, religion, psychology, philosophy, sociology, and more. The appended notes tell of assiduous research and concentration. To the pragmatic reader it sometimes appears that Morgentaler makes observations and draws conclusions that are more profound than Dickens himself might have achieved, or admitted. This is, of course, a common diversion in revisionist studies of well‐known authors and other celebrities.It is inevitable that the perennial question of the relative strength of nature and nurture must have prominence in this study. In his earlier novels Dickens implied support for the notion that goodness and virtue were heritable traits allied to beauty and good physical appearance. Morgentaler returns repeatedly to this question in many aspects. In her final chapter she points out that Dickens's views changed, paradoxically, after The Origin of Species was published, toward the end of his life. He then gave less weight to the influence of heredity. She has, perhaps, missed an opportunity of recording that Dickens noticed hereditary factors in alcoholism and longevity. In the case of Jenny Wren's family, Mr. Cleaver was “like his own father, a weak wretched trembling creature, falling to pieces, never sober” . The Wardle family in Pickwick Papers showed familial longevity in that “only one member hasn't lived to eighty‐five, and he was beheaded by one of the Henrys.”The relationship of some of the discussion to heredity is profound, often remote, even cryptic. To those who are hybrids of a scientific historian and an obsessive Dickens aficionado, this work will be absorbing. Unfortunately for the author and the publisher, such hybrids are probably rare—but I hope not extinct. To the pure scientist this work might be an uphill exercise. The production of the book is faultless

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