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Book Cover
E-book
Author Sorensen, Willis Conner

Title Brethren of the net : American entomology, 1840-1880 / W. Conner Sorensen
Published Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, ©1995

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Description 1 online resource (xiv, 357 pages) : illustrations
Series History of American science and technology series
History of American science and technology series.
Contents 1. Entomology in the American Context to 1840 -- 2. "A Few Literary Gentlemen": The Entomological Society of Pennsylvania, 1842-1853 -- 3. Of Cabinets and Collections -- 4. Agricultural Entomologists and Institutions -- 5. The Balance of Nature -- 6. A Weevil, a Fly, a Bug, and a Beetle -- 7. The Rocky Mountain Locust Plague -- 8. Profile of the American Entomological Community About 1870 -- 9. Acceptance and Implications of Evolution -- 10. William Henry Edwards and Polymorphism in Butterflies -- 11. The Yucca Moth -- 12. The Debate over Entomological Nomenclature -- Appendix 1: Entomological Authors Cited in the Record of American Entomology -- Appendix 2: Entomological Authors Cited in the Record of American Entomology Ranked According to Priority
Summary Sorensen asks how it came about that, within the span of forty years, the American entomological community developed from a few gentlemen naturalists with primary links to Europe to a thriving scientific community exercising world leadership in entomological science. He investigates the relationship between American and European entomology, the background of American entomologists, the implications of entomological theory, and the specific links between 19th-century American society and the rapid institutional growth and advances in theoretical and applied entomology. This book illuminates an important period in entomological research and describes the careers and scientific concerns of hundreds of little-known American men and women. With implications for the history of entomology, the history of science, and American social and intellectual history, this study invites comparisons with other professional scientific groups, such as the geologists and botanists. Sorensen suggests that Americans contributed more directly to evolutionary theory than has been recognized. He also suggests that a decentralized, federal political structure in the United States provided a more congenial environment for natural history investigations than did the centralized structures of European states. Based primarily on the correspondence of American entomologists, Brethren of the Net draws together information from diverse sources to illuminate an important chapter in the history of American science
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 317-343) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Entomology -- United States -- History
Entomologists -- United States -- History
NATURE -- Animals -- Insects & Spiders.
SCIENCE -- Life Sciences -- Zoology -- Entomology.
Entomologists
Entomology
Zoology.
Health & Biological Sciences.
Invertebrates & Protozoa.
United States
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
LC no. 94005258
ISBN 0585325596
9780585325590