Robert Knox: Racial Imagination, Transcendental Anatomy and Western Colonial Expansion
Date issued
2013
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Západočeská univerzita v Plzni
Abstract
The main purpose of this study is to discuss the nature of racial imagination in the work of
Robert Knox, one of the founders of modern comparative anatomy and the author of The
Races of Men: A Philosophical Enquiry into Influence of Race over the Destinies of Nations
(1850), in the intellectual context of development of philosophic or transcendental anatomy
and in the political context of colonial and imperial expansion of West in the nineteenth
century. Robert Knox belonged to the intellectual influential group of Scottish political radicals
and scientific materialists who played an important role in British academic life in
1820s and 1830s. These scholars shared the belief that new vision of Nature derived from
continental German and French anatomical school should paved way for crucial social and
political reforms aimed against interests of landed nobility and Church. However, in the
1840s the disillusionment came and the academic status of the above mentioned group was
seriously shaken. The pessimistic racial teaching of Robert Knox was a fruit of this frustration
and loss of scientific prestige.
Description
Subject(s)
rasová teorie, filosofická anatomie, transcendentální anatomie, kolonialismus, imperialismus, euroasijská revoluce, Robert Knox
Citation
Akta Fakulty filozofické Západočeské univerzity v Plzni. 2013, č. 2, s. 14-36.