
Published online:
21 September 2017
Published in print:
27 April 2017
Online ISBN:
9780226437064
Print ISBN:
9780226436906
Contents
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12.1 The institutionalization of race and the “irrepressible” woman question 12.1 The institutionalization of race and the “irrepressible” woman question
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12.2 “Sexual selection has always been a subject which has interested me much” 12.2 “Sexual selection has always been a subject which has interested me much”
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12.3 Embryos, ancestors, and “my poor dear child” pangenesis 12.3 Embryos, ancestors, and “my poor dear child” pangenesis
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12.4 “Sexual selection … is altogether your own subject” 12.4 “Sexual selection … is altogether your own subject”
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12.5 A “metamorphosed (in retrograde direction) naturalist” 12.5 A “metamorphosed (in retrograde direction) naturalist”
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12.6 “But we shall never convince each other” 12.6 “But we shall never convince each other”
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Chapter
Twelve The Battle for Beauty: Wallace versus Darwin
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Pages
370–416
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Published:April 2017
Cite
OXFORD ACADEMIC STYLE
Richards, Evelleen, 'The Battle for Beauty: Wallace versus Darwin', Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection (Chicago, IL , 2017; online edn, Chicago Scholarship Online, 21 Sept. 2017), https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226437064.003.0012, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
CHICAGO STYLE
Richards, Evelleen. "The Battle for Beauty: Wallace versus Darwin." In Darwin and the Making of Sexual Selection University of Chicago Press, 2017. Chicago Scholarship Online, 2017. https://doi.org/10.7208/chicago/9780226437064.003.0012.
Abstract
Chapter 12 picks up the history of sexual selection in the late 1860s as Darwin set about researching and writing the Descent of Man. It analyses Darwin’s prolonged dispute with Wallace over the issues of female choice, protective colouration and human evolution in the contexts of the Huxley-led drive for Darwinian cognitive and cultural authority, institutional conflict between the Darwinian Ethnological Society and the racialist Anthropological Society of London, the American Civil War, the Eyre affair, the social and professional implications of the “irrepressible” woman question and John Stuart Mill’s championing of women’s rights.
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