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Michael Tondre is Assistant Professor of English at Stony Brook University.
The Physics of Possibility offers an excellent and substantial
contribution to the field of studies on Victorian literature and
science. As Tondre rightly observes, the distinctiveness of this
period is apt to be overlooked in considerations of literature and
physics, which assume the Victorians are still steeped in an
eighteenth-century Newtonian worldview or view Victorian physics
merely as precursors to the early-twentieth century revolutions of
relativity and quantum mechanics. The book is interesting,
original, and quite polished.--Barri J. Gold, Muhlenberg College,
author of ThermoPoetics: Energy in Victorian Literature and
Science
"Beautifully researched, beguiling, and risky in all the best ways,
The Physics of Possibility opens entirely new possibilities for how
we read chance in the nineteenth-century novel. Tondre convincingly
teases out the complex texture of Victorian debates over
probability, perspective, and normalization within contemporary
mathematics, astronomy, evolutionary science, and thermodynamics.
Along the way, he upends our casual sense that the realist novel
simulates chance on the way to confident determinations of plot.
Tondre argues, on the contrary, that novelistic probability opened
a range of new prospects for indeterminacy, alternative futures,
and the 'unpredictable swerve of material forms.' Offering new
approaches to science and literature, queer studies, narrative
theory and the physics of character, it is impossible not to be
moved by The Physics of Possibility."--Devin Griffiths, University
of Southern California, author of The Age of Analogy: Science and
Literature Between the Darwins
As an account of how probability recontoured both science and
literature, The Physics of Possibility truly shines.... Its
argumentative polyvocality makes for a dynamic readingexperience
and perhaps contributes to Tondre's tendency to surprise the reader
with rich local insights far beyond what even the strong overall
argument would lead you to expect.-- "Modern Philology"
Tondre (English, Stony Brook Univ.) argues for the ways that
developments in mathematics and physics were intricately connected
not only to work of Darwin and others' thinking through variation
and natural selection, but also to formal experiments, particularly
in relation to time, in Victorian literature.... [T]he book's fresh
insights into Dickens, Eliot, and other oft-studied authors make it
appropriate for most college and university libraries where English
is studied. The index and copious bibliography would also make
valuable tools for students studying Victorian literature and/or
the history of science. Summing Up: Recommended.-- "CHOICE"
Tondre offers a robust commentary on his selected novels while also
documenting the convergence of physical sciences and
historiographical thinking in the mid-nineteenth century. He
evidences how fictional works 'contributed to theories incipient in
science' and redirected the 'physics of variation toward [more]
progressive social agendas' in Victorian Britain. Tondre constructs
a comprehensive framework of historical, scientific, and literary
artefacts to help readers recognize the boundlessness of
possibility and the inherent value in striving toward it.--
"British Society for Literature and Science"
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