Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/13079
Title: Survival of the most memorable : Darwin’s textual afterlife through rhetoric in On the Origin of Species
Authors: Head, Samuel
Keywords: Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882
Evolution (Biology) in literature
Collective memory
Issue Date: 2016-10
Publisher: University of Malta. Department of English
Citation: Head, S. (2016). Survival of the most memorable : Darwin’s textual afterlife through rhetoric in On the Origin of Species. Antae Journal, 3(2), 196-215.
Abstract: The unassuming Charles Darwin did not invent the theory of evolution. However, one reason why Charles Darwin specifically appears as the figurehead for evolution, and not somebody else, comes from his rhetorical endeavour to create a textual afterlife for himself. Creating a personal afterlife for yourself within your written works is a trait that scholars have observed as a goal within many literary poets, authors, and scholars of the 19th century. Darwin, apparently, also imbued himself into his writings, especially On The Origin of Species, to create his own textual afterlife, one that would survive the other evolutionists of his era. Darwin survived by creating his own textual afterlife through the rhetorical elements of identification with his audiences and transcendence, concepts theorised by the 20th Century rhetorician, Kenneth Burke, strategies that Burke argued were the most fundamental to persuasion. I will show how Darwin survives the other evolutionists by creating his own textual afterlife that would connect to and exist in the collective memory of not only his contemporary Victorians, but also generations of people who would come cross Darwin and his theory of evolution.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/13079
Appears in Collections:Antae Journal, Volume 3, Issue 2
Antae Journal, Volume 3, Issue 2

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