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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John TomanPublisher: James Clarke & Co Ltd Imprint: Lutterworth Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.503kg ISBN: 9780718893019ISBN 10: 0718893018 Pages: 326 Publication Date: 30 May 2013 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsIllustrations Acknowledgements Introduction Prologue: 'Some great change must take place' Chapter 1. Piety, Progress and Print: Kilvert's background Chapter 2. Nature's Classroom Chapter 3. Kilvert the Naturalist Chapter 4. Steamboats, Viaducts and Railways Chapter 5. Kilvert and Science and Technology Chapter 6. Natural Law and the Mind Chapter 7. Kilvert and Tyndall Chapter 8. Miracles and Wonders Chapter 9. Kilvert and Teaching Chapter 10. Museums and Picture Galleries Chapter 11. Th e Christian Geographer Chapter 12. 'Plunging into Ancient Chaos': Kilvert and Evolution References Select Bibliography IndexReviews'Toman completes here a thorough reassessment of the literary, cultural and theological influences on Kilvert, bringing us closer than ever before to his character. Meticulously researched and written in a clear, engaging style, the book foregrounds the diarist's complex and ambivalent relationship with the rapidly developing climate of the mid-nineteenth century.' Dr Philip Dunham, University of Coventry 'Toman's study reveals Kilvert to have been a man who 'had the curiosity and courage to face the age's difficult questions.' The book's thorough and scholarly approach will ensure that it remains an indispensable tool to all those who wish to understand him and the forces which shaped him.' Dr Martin Crossley Evans, University of Bristol Toman will have put all devotees of Francis Kilvert in his debt with this masterly conclusion to this trilogy - Bernard Palmer, Church Times, 16 August 2013 'Toman completes here a thorough reassessment of the literary, cultural and theological influences on Kilvert, bringing us closer than ever before to his character. Meticulously researched and written in a clear, engaging style, the book foregrounds the diarist's complex and ambivalent relationship with the rapidly developing climate of the mid-nineteenth century.' Dr Philip Dunham, University of Coventry 'Toman's study reveals Kilvert to have been a man who 'had the curiosity and courage to face the age's difficult questions.' The book's thorough and scholarly approach will ensure that it remains an indispensable tool to all those who wish to understand him and the forces which shaped him.' Dr Martin Crossley Evans, University of Bristol 'Toman will have put all devotees of Francis Kilvert in his debt with this masterly conclusion to this trilogy' Bernard Palmer, Church Times, 16 August 2013 'Each chapter benefits from detailed references, making this scholarly volume an excellent documentation of Kilvert's questioning wonder at evolving ideas, encompassing Tyndall, Darwin and evolution, [...] railways, steamships, etc. This is a book to read if you want to examine the man behind the diary, and to understand the tensions engendered by the dimensions of progress and tradition.' The Gower Society Newsletter, Autumn 2013 'This is Kilvert as we have never perceived him. This is the magic interaction of God-inspired Evangelical endeavour, its influence on science and endeavour, discovery, academic thought, the natural world which so interested Kilvert and a driving forward such as this country has not seen before or since.' Michael Sharp, The Kilvert Society Journal, September 2013 This book is the result of meticulous research of Kilvert's published diaries... John Toman has created an interest and knowledge of Francis Kilvert's original work, I will be reading any further Kilvert diaries, if they emerge, and returning again to Toman's analysis. Pat Bowker, North West Labour History, Volume 39, 2014 - 15 Toman's book is a useful reminder of the whole range of response to the Victorian 'crisis of faith.' Cliff Davies, Wadham College Gazette, (2013) This admirable book completes John Toman's trilogy on Francis Kilvert...Not only is this volume the essential handbook on Kilvert, but it also encapsulates some of the fundamental issues that dominated intellectual life in the 19th century and remain so important in our own time. David Whitehead, Transactions of the Woolhope Naturalists Field Club, 2014 Toman's study is detailed, meticulously researched, and informative... -Year's Work in English Studies, Vol 94, No 1, 2015 'Toman completes here a thorough reassessment of the literary, cultural and theological influences on Kilvert, bringing us closer than ever before to his character. Meticulously researched and written in a clear, engaging style, the book foregrounds the diarist's complex and ambivalent relationship with the rapidly developing climate of the mid-nineteenth century.' Dr Philip Dunham, University of Coventry 'Toman's study reveals Kilvert to have been a man who 'had the curiosity and courage to face the age's difficult questions.' The book's thorough and scholarly approach will ensure that it remains an indispensable tool to all those who wish to understand him and the forces which shaped him.' Dr Martin Crossley Evans, University of Bristol Toman will have put all devotees of Francis Kilvert in his debt with this masterly conclusion to this trilogy - Bernard Palmer, Church Times, 16 August 2013 This is Kilvert as we have never perceived him. This is the magic interaction of God-inspired Evangelical endeavour, its influence on science and endeavour, discovery, academic thought, the natural world which so interested Kilvert and a driving forward such as this country has not seen before or since. Michael Sharp, The Kilvert Society Journal, September 2013 This book is the result of meticulous research of Kilvert's published diaries... John Toman has created an interest and knowledge of Francis Kilvert's original work, I will be reading any further Kilvert diaries, if they emerge, and returning again to Toman's analysis. Pat Bowker, North West Labour History, Volume 39, 2014 - 15 'Toman completes here a thorough reassessment of the literary, cultural and theological influences on Kilvert, bringing us closer than ever before to his character. Meticulously researched and written in a clear, engaging style, the book foregrounds the diarist's complex and ambivalent relationship with the rapidly developing climate of the mid-nineteenth century.' Dr Philip Dunham, University of Coventry 'Toman's study reveals Kilvert to have been a man who 'had the curiosity and courage to face the age's difficult questions.' The book's thorough and scholarly approach will ensure that it remains an indispensable tool to all those who wish to understand him and the forces which shaped him.' Dr Martin Crossley Evans, University of Bristol Toman will have put all devotees of Francis Kilvert in his debt with this masterly conclusion to this trilogy - Bernard Palmer, Church Times, 16 August 2013 This is Kilvert as we have never perceived him. This is the magic interaction of God-inspired Evangelical endeavour, its influence on science and endeavour, discovery, academic thought, the natural world which so interested Kilvert and a driving forward such as this country has not seen before or since. Michael Sharp, The Kilvert Society Journal, September 2013 'Toman completes here a thorough reassessment of the literary, cultural and theological influences on Kilvert, bringing us closer than ever before to his character. Meticulously researched and written in a clear, engaging style, the book foregrounds the diarist's complex and ambivalent relationship with the rapidly developing climate of the mid-nineteenth century.' Dr Philip Dunham, University of Coventry 'Toman's study reveals Kilvert to have been a man who 'had the curiosity and courage to face the age's difficult questions.' The book's thorough and scholarly approach will ensure that it remains an indispensable tool to all those who wish to understand him and the forces which shaped him.' Dr Martin Crossley Evans, University of Bristol Author InformationJohn Toman spent thirty years in education as teacher, lecturer, and schools inspector. He is married with five children and lives in Bristol. For many years, he read and re-read Kilvert's Diary and walked 'Kilvert Country.' During the last twenty years, he has made an intensive study of the Diary and of Kilvert's background. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |