Browse Items (68 total)

Fall of Man_6_F.jpg
The author reassures his audience that he has dealt with his subject matter with great delicacy and therefore, unlike Darwin, not found it necessary “to cloak any part of [the] lecture in the obscurity of a learned language”.

Fall of Man_46_F.jpg
The author cites Darwin’s use of Latin in a footnote on p.13 of Descent, vol. 1 which veiled a statement on baboons’ sexual attraction to human females. Here, the author not only translates elements of the Latin into English but also provides an…

1871_Descent_I13n7.jpg
Darwin’s Latin statement, most likely translated by his son Francis, on certain baboons’ sexual attraction to human females.

S.E.Darwin_1838.jpg
As early as 1838, Darwin had begun to record and make observations on expressions, noting the behaviour of animals as well as the development of children – both his own and those of his friends. Just weeks before her marriage to Charles, Emma…

L900.b.69_p40_41.jpg
Picture of Jenny, the orang-utan observed by Darwin.

DAR_204_161back.jpg
I have not been able to catch her in a reflecting mood, to make yr observation but she told me a fact which I think quite worthy to go down in your book along with the baby’s nods & winks viz. that when she coughs very sharply in the dark sparks come…

CCC.38.226_p147.jpg
Darwin broke with previous traditions in physiognomy. His notebooks and correspondence contain references to earlier works in the field, such as the Fragments of Physiognomy of Johann Caspar Lavater. Darwin owned the ten-volume French edition, with…

XIV.29.57_p146.jpg

DAR_92_A33v.jpg
Darwin made use of a worldwide network of scientists and non-scientists to gather information. In 1867, he began to send out handwritten questionnaires about human expression, in particular to those who were in contact with non-European peoples.…

Atlas.4.86.13_plate2.jpg
This map of the British Empire in 1869 shows some of the places where Darwin sent questionnaires
Output Formats

atom, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2