Instead of children: Legacy and embodied interpretation in the woodwardian museum
Volume
118
Pagination
765 - 786
DOI
10.1353/sip.2021.0028
Journal
Studies in Philology
Issue
ISSN
0039-3738
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
John Woodward’s collection of geological specimens, bequeathed to Cambridge University in 1728, was one of the first public institutional collections of its kind. The collector himself led a checkered career and was frequently accused of self-importance and arro-gance by contemporaries. Studies of Woodward’s legacy project have hence tended to characterize his bequest as an exercise in self-aggrandizement at the expense of its use-fulness to subsequent generations of geologists. However, I propose that by resituating Woodward’s elaborate will and testament in the context of his distinctive collecting and taxonomic practices, the Woodwardian Museum can be reframed as his attempt to per-petuate an embodied methodology for understanding the natural world. By recontextu-alizing Woodward’s legacy project, I offer a reassessment of a prolonged discourse that has conflated his childlessness with a desire to replicate himself, suggesting that his collection tries to foster a meaningful intellectual progeny rather than to merely construct an elaborate funerary monument.
Authors
Burgess, WGCollections
- Department of English [260]