LATEST SALES & OFFERS: PROMOTIONS

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

James Cowles Prichard of the Red Lodge

A Life of Science During the Age of Improvement

Margaret M. Crump

$282.95   $226.58

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
University of Nebraska Press
01 June 2025
Margaret M. Crump offers the first thorough biography of British scientist and physician James Cowles Prichard (1786–1848), an intellectual giant in the developing human sciences, a pioneering psychiatric theorist, and Europe’s leading anthropologist during the first half of the nineteenth century.
By:  
Imprint:   University of Nebraska Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9781496242006
ISBN 10:   1496242009
Series:   Critical Studies in the History of Anthropology
Pages:   277
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Further / Higher Education ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
List of Illustrations Preface Introduction Apologia Acknowledgements Abbreviations One: Time and Place: A Bristol Quaker Childhood in a Turbulent World Two: “A Studious Turn of Mind”: Preparatory Medical Education Three: MD, Edin:Lernfreiheit in Scotland and Oxbridge Four: Citizen, Husband, Gentleman, Physician and Scientist: Getting Established in Bristol, 1810-1816 Five: “Sharpening his Wits upon the Carcasses of the Poor”: Working for Medical Charities Six: The Single Origin and Unity of Humankind: Creating British Anthropology, 1805-1826 Seven: Epidemics, History and Mythology: Building a Reputation in Bristol 1817-1822 Eight: Nervous Diseases: Neurology and Psychiatry, 1822-1847 Nine: “Irksome Things”: Improving Bristol and Medical Practice, 1823-1826 Ten: The Early Red Lodge Years: Improving Institutions and Publications, 1827-1832 Eleven: Life and Reputation at the Red Lodge: Family, Friends and Science, 1833-1839 Twelve: New Scientists, New Organisations, New Ideas: Creating British Anthropology, 1833-1848 Thirteen: Christian, Humanitarian Anthropology: 1836-1848 Publications and Legacy Fourteen: From the Red Lodge to Asylumdom: A New Career, 1839-1845 Fifteen: Public Service and Private Misery: Living in London, 1845-1848 Conclusion Bibliography Index

Margaret M. Crump is an independent scholar in nineteenth-century British intellectual and cultural history and works as an arts educator and artist in Bristol, United Kingdom.

Reviews for James Cowles Prichard of the Red Lodge: A Life of Science During the Age of Improvement

“James Cowles Prichard achieved an international reputation for research on what he called the ‘physical history of mankind,’ publishing pioneering volumes on what is now called anthropology. He did this in the midst of a busy medical practice in Bristol, as well as dedicated participation in Bristol’s civic and scientific life. Margaret Crump does Prichard proud in this fine study of such a multifaceted man and his times.”-William Bynum, professor emeritus at the University College London and author of Science and the Practice of Medicine in the Nineteenth Century “James Cowles Prichard was Britain’s most significant nineteenth-century, pre-Darwinian anthropologist and brilliant polymath. At long last, Margaret Crump has provided us with a much-needed, comprehensive biography of this exceptional scientist and scholar. Her archival and bibliographical scholarship are second to none and cover such exciting topics as Prichard’s Quaker background and his antiracist support for the notion of the unity of mankind. I wholeheartedly recommend this gem of first-rate academic learning that has implications for current affairs in race and equality.”-Nicolaas A. Rupke, Johnson Professor of History at Washington and Lee University and author of Richard Owen: Biology without Darwin “Posterity has bifurcated James Cowles Prichard’s contribution: historians of anthropology rarely mention his ideas on Alienism; psychiatrists know next to nothing about his ethnological work. At long last, these moieties have been brought together by Margaret M. Crump, who in a solid and sympathetic intellectual biography has regaled us with the first complete picture of this great Victorian mind.”-German E. Berrios, emeritus professor of the epistemology of psychiatry at the University of Cambridge   “Like other famous Bristol figures, including Brunel, Elizabeth Blackwell, and Humphry Davy, Prichard finally has his definitive biography. In this exceedingly informative and engrossing account of the life and times of James Cowles Prichard, Margaret Crump expertly weaves together the life, medical career, and anthropological writings of one of Bristol’s most interesting past inhabitants.”-Jonathan Reinarz, professor of the history of medicine at the University of Birmingham and editor of A Cultural History of Medicine in the Age of Empire “Margaret Crump rightly points out that for such an eminent Victorian, James Cowles Prichard has been strangely neglected. . . . Crump brings out the connections between Prichard’s career as a physician and as an anthropologist and discusses the influences of his Quaker faith and Tory politics on his scientific thinking. . . . Her study is well written, carefully researched, and full of interesting information.”-Adam Kuper, fellow of the British Royal Society and author of The Museum of Other People: From Colonial Acquisitions to Cosmopolitan Exhibitions “Margaret Crump has done a great service in writing this lively, informative, and meticulously researched biography of the remarkable James Cowles Prichard, the visionary and humane English physician and anthropologist whose landmark Researches into the Physical History of Mankind was read by both Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. In telling the story of the eminent but often overlooked Prichard, Crump’s wonderfully far-ranging book deftly interweaves the history of medicine, psychiatry, anthropology, linguistics, paleontology, evolution, and even a dash of Egyptology, illuminating the life and thought of this fascinating scientist in the context of his world-changing times.”-James T. Costa, executive director and professor at Highlands Biological Station of Western Carolina University, and author of Radical by Nature: The Revolutionary Life of Alfred Russel Wallace


See Also