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Jane Marcet

Jane Marcet (née Haldimand) /ˈmɑːrsɛt/ (1 January 1769 – 28 June 1858) was an English salonnière of Swiss origin,[1] and an innovative writer of popular, explanatory science books. She also broke ground with Conversations on Political Economy (1816), which explain the ideas of Adam Smith, Malthus and David Ricardo.

Jane Marcet
BornJanuary 1,1769
London, UK
DiedJune 28, 1858
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry

Life

Jane Marcet was born in London on 1 January 1769, one of twelve children of a wealthy Genevan merchant and banker, Anthony Francis Haldimand (1740/41–1817), and his wife Jane (died 1785). She was educated at home with her brothers. Her studies included Latin (essential for the sciences), chemistry, biology and history, and topics more usual for young ladies in England.[2][3] Jane took over the running of the family at age 15, after her mother's death.[4] She managed the house and helped to bring up her younger siblings. Her younger brother William Haldimand (1784–1862) became a director of the Bank of England and a member of Parliament.[5] She also acted as her father's hostess, helping to entertain frequent parties of scientific and literary guests.[3] Jane developed an early interest in painting during a visit to Italy with her father in 1796, and studied with Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Lawrence.[5] Her artistic training later enabled her to illustrate her books.

Jane was married in 1799 to Alexander John Gaspard Marcet (1770–1822), a political exile from Geneva, Switzerland who graduated from medical school at the University of Edinburgh as a physician in 1797. After their marriage, the Marcets continued to live in London.[6] They had four children, one of whom, François Marcet (1803–1883), became a well-known physicist.[5]

Alexander was strongly interested in chemistry, and became a lecturer at Guy's Hospital in London and a Fellow of the Royal Society.[6] When Jane became interested in learning more about chemistry, they conducted experiments together in a home laboratory, discussing the scientific principles involved.[3][5]

The Marcets belonged in a literary and scientific social circle of leading writers and scientists, such as Mary Somerville,[6] Henry Hallam, Harriet Martineau, Auguste Arthur de la Rive and Maria Edgeworth.[4] Novelist Maria Edgeworth described their home in her letters, with lively, intelligent children and a welcome for visitors.[5] One Edgeworth anecdote gives a vivid picture of the Marcet family and its scientific and social activities:

"We came here last Friday, and have spent our time most happily with our excellent friend Mrs. Marcet. His children are all so fond of Dr. Marcet, we see that he is their companion and friend. They have all been happily busy in making a paper fire-balloon, sixteen feet in diameter, and thirty feet high. A large company were invited to see it mount."[7]

Jane and her father were close throughout their lives. He lived with her and her husband after their marriage. When Jane's father died in 1817, she received a substantial legacy that enabled Alexander Marcet to give up his medical practice and devote himself to chemistry full-time.[6] Alexander in his turn understood and supported his wife's need for intellectual engagement and productive work.[5]

"Conversations"

After helping to read the proofs of one of her husband's books, Marcet decided to write her own. She produced expository books on chemistry, botany, religion and economics under the general title "Conversations". In her prefaces, Marcet addresses whether such knowledge is suitable for women, arguing against objections and stating that public opinion supports her view.[5]

The first was written in 1805, though not issued until 1819, as Conversations on Natural Philosophy. It covered the basics of scientific knowledge of the time: physics, mechanics, astronomy, the properties of fluids, air and optics.[5] It set a common format for her works: a dialogue between two pupils, Caroline and Emily (or Emilie), and their teacher, Mrs. Bryant (Mrs. B).[6][8] Caroline, the younger, asks flippant questions that still move the dialogue along, while Emily is more controlled and reflective. Mrs. Bryant is a maternal mentoring figure, who leads them to question and examine their ideas. Both the scientific content and the discursive process of sharing scientific knowledge were important to Marcet's readers.[9]

 
Conversations on Chemistry, Title page, Twelfth edition, 1832. Chemical Heritage Foundation
 
Plate from Jane Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry

Marcet's next book, Conversations on Chemistry, Intended More Especially for the Female Sex appeared anonymously in 1805,[5] and became her best known work. In summarizing and popularising the work of Humphry Davy, whose lectures she attended, it was one of the first elementary science textbooks. It came with Marcet's drawings of chemical apparatus[10] and stressed the need for experiment and for theoretical rigour.[5] Jane Marcet was not explicitly identified as the author until the 12th edition of 1832.[10] The book went into 16 editions in England, where it was an early inspiration for the young Michael Faraday.[6] It was widely plagiarised in America, appearing there in at least 23 editions.[5]

Marcet in her Conversations on Political Economy (1816) also popularised the arguments of such political economists as Adam Smith, Malthus, and above all David Ricardo. This was well received and widely read, though some later economists such as Alfred Marshall were dismissive, to the detriment of its later reputation, and Joseph Schumpeter derided it as "economics for schoolgirls."[5] The purpose, however, was an important one that went beyond the lucrative demands of a niche market. Mrs B's flippant pupil Caroline says she would have thought a woman could be excused ignorance of that topic. Mrs B replies tartly, "When you plead in favour of ignorance, there is a strong presumption that you are in the wrong."[11] Marcet's Conversations on Political Economy were an inspiration to Harriet Martineau to introduce economic topics into her writings.[5][12]

In 1820 the Marcets travelled to Geneva, Switzerland, intending to relocate there. In 1822, Alexander died unexpectedly while on a visit to Britain, to Jane's extreme distress. She went through one of several periods of depression that affected her life, described by her friend Auguste de La Rive as a "shadow enveloping an energetic and active spirit."[5] She retained strong ties to her Swiss friends, but eventually returned to live in England.[5] There she remained active in scientific circles, and updated and published new editions of her major works throughout her life. Her last edition of "Conversations on Chemistry" appeared when she was 84. In later life, Marcet wrote new works mainly for children, perhaps with her grandchildren in mind. Mary's Grammar (1835) became a classic.[5]

Jane Marcet lived for the latter part of her life with a daughter, at 14 Stratton Street, Piccadilly, London. She died there on 28 June 1858.[5]

Legacy

Marcet's major contribution was her work as an educator.[5] Her work contained few original ideas, but rested on careful study of current theories and voluminous ongoing correspondence with current scientists. It was noted for precision, accuracy and thoroughness. She presented science and economics in an informal way, but her simple introductions to often complex subjects were widely appreciated by adults as well as children. Perhaps most importantly, they reached women, including students in prominent women's seminaries, who had not been encouraged to explore the experimental sciences at the time.[9]

Marcet was uniquely qualified to popularise chemistry and economics by her contacts with many of the greatest thinkers and scientists of her day. She deserves much credit in the new fields of chemistry and political economy. By writing in discursive English, she made scientific knowledge accessible not only to women, but to men not trained in the fundamental languages of a classical education, Latin and Greek. While her original intent was to educate women, she reached a broader audience in line with enlightenment ideals, and laid claim to the natural sciences as a public endeavour.[9]

When the Boston Girls' High and Normal School became the first school in America to teach science to women through laboratory experience, in 1865, Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry was the text chosen.[10] Her works remained standard textbooks even When Henry James wrote The Turn of the Screw in 1898. The governess refers offhandedly to a text being "as impersonal as Mrs. Marcet or nine-times-nine."

Intellectual legacy

One of those who read Jane's work was Michael Faraday, born in 1791, who would become one of the world's greatest scientists, revolutionizing physics and chemistry. He was impressed by her work on chemistry, which helped him to find a new calling for science. He later claimed it had played a vital role in his own career as a chemist.[13]

Faraday remarked, "When I came to know Mrs. Marcet personally; how often I cast my thoughts backwards, delighting to connect the past and the present; how often, when sending a paper to her as a thank you offering, I thought of my first instructress."[14]

The book aimed to help others who were bewildered by chemistry by explaining better but remaining scientifically accurate. It was a user-friendly book. The subjects were divided into two parts, each of more than 300 pages. It is framed by conversations between an adult teacher and two children. Marcet also added her own figures to explain chemistry in an easy way.[10] In England, 16 editions of Conversations on Chemistry were published up to the 1830s, with all-inclusive updates. She influenced many individuals all over the world. Girls and others who were not wealthy were pursuing the subject, and able to get along with it.[9]

Marcet's active support for teaching chemistry to beginners through an experimental laboratory was recognized by many. After the Civil War, laboratory instruction was becoming the norm in American schools. Despite competition from many other authors and books, Marcet's ruled in the female advancement of knowledge.[6] Its popularity even in the early 1900s suggests increasing acceptance by American schools to including basic subjects of theoretical and experimental science in the education of females. This availability of education set the platform for increasing women's engagements in science. She inspired many of the greatest chemists, scientists and Mathematicians in history. Mary Somerville, born in 1790, the mathematician after whom The University of Oxford's first women's college was named, said of Jane Marcet: “No one at this time can duly estimate the importance of Mrs Marcet’s scientific works.”[6]

The book remained popular in the United States partly through the publishing of nearly two dozen derivative editions by John Lee Comstock and others. Lack of international copyright laws at the time meant that Marcet did not control or receive payment for these editions.[15] Having become a standard textbook in Britain and United States, it was translated into German and French. In the United States, Boston's Girls' High School and Normal School became the first school to teach science to women through laboratory experience, in 1865, based on the text of Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry.[10][16]

Jane was inspired by the work economists of David Ricardo, Adam Smith and many others. When writing Conversations on Political Economy in 1816, which notably drew attention to the arguments based on notable works by some famous economists. It targeted the general idea of economics with liberating and educating poor people, irrespective of sex. It embraced general notions of political economy with the distribution of property, taxes, the division of labour, on capital, and on the wages, population and social predicament of the poor.[13]

In a letter to Pierre Prevost, Marcet stated, "I can assure you that the greatest pleasure I derive from success is the hope of doing good by the propagation of useful truths amongst a class of people, who, excepting in a popular familiar form, would never have become acquainted with them."[17]

The book became a popular read, although some later economists like Alfred Marshall showed indifference to it, which damaged her reputation. Joseph Schumpeter mocked it as "economics for schoolgirls". The aim of her book was an important one that went beyond the moneymaking for small markets. It was intended to popularize the lessons of political economy for the self-improving working classes and school curricula. It attempted to simplify the economics for the fewer, privileged audience and educate younger people in the principle of economics by which markets are regulated, using simple tales. Marcet's Conversations on Political Economy inspired Harriet Martineau, a British social theorist and Whig writer often cited as the first female sociologist, to introduce economic topics into her writings.[18] She was inspired to teach the principles of economics not by pressing them into a story, but by displaying their natural workings in selected phases of life. It followed a style resembling that of her previous book and likewise became popular.

Marcet inherited considerable properties from her father in 1817. She and her husband moved to Geneva in the 1820s, but two years later Alexander died. Jane eventually returned in London, where she again drew together prominent intellectuals and bankers. Her later works largely focus on less-demanding topics and were intended in most cases for a younger audience.[6]

Further success came with the 1819 publication of Conversations on Natural Philosophy, which she had written before Conversations on Chemistry. She did not acknowledge herself as author until 1832. Her other notable books in the period included Mary's Grammar (1835_.[6]

Marcet's early anonymity left it open for male authors in the United States to supplement and issue their editions of Jane's work in their own invented language and place their names on the book's title page as authors. When Marcet published the 12th edition under her own name, it created a situation of chaos among the published books, but nothing happened in the end. Lack of international copyright laws meant Jane never received royalties for any US editions under the names of other authors.[6]

Marcet went on to publish several other popular works, including Conversations on Political Economy and Conversations on Plant Physiology, but none became as widely read as Conversations on Chemistry. With each successive edition, Marcet continued to update the book. She wrote to Michael Faraday in 1845, an esteemed writer and a member of the prestigious Royal Society, for detailed and expanded information on his research. He presented his latest breakthroughs to the woman who had first set him on his chemical journey.[14]

Scholarship and popularisation

Jane Marcet spread knowledge by easing its creation, sharing and use. She created and maintained social and intellectual ties among scientists, elites, literary writers, economists and the wider public. She worked on the boundaries of various objects of discussion, from which knowledge flowed in all directions. Those showing respect for her ideas on political economy included Thomas Robert Malthus and James Mill.[19]

Willie Henderson tried to frame Jane as an educational broker, arguing that to change the perspectives of others' minds was "mere capitalist propaganda" for "sophisticated curriculum development".[19]

For Jane, communication was not a one-way activity. It conveyed a message and made the public aware of the ideas of professionals, who in turn were provided with new challenges by her facilitation of two-way communication. She brought a deep perception of classical economics to bear on social questions by counterposing the "prejudices and popular feeling of uninformed benevolence".[19] Furthermore, she introduced the insights of continental thinkers into the writings of the English classical school, so challenging them to decide what was peripheral and what central to the story. This included consolidating the ideas of bankers, political actors and business people as professional political economists.[19]

Marcet kept herself distant from people with central dogmas of classical economics, but kept the conversation going with the masters of them. She was tough about accepting criticism, but at other times kept her directions to herself. While teaching wisdom through professionals to the untaught public, she also built up the networks that focused on her direct engagement to transmit the conversation to the people.[19]

Marcet's Conversations on Political Economy appeared in 14 editions and was translated into Dutch, German, Spanish, and twice French. It had a strong impact on young writers and popularisers like Harriet Martineau, Jean-Baptiste Say, Millicent Garrett Fawcett, on great political economists such as Malthus, JS Mill and many more, and on politicians and bankers with whom she had social ties.[19] This made her one of the great early 1900s popularizers of political economy, her information flow being central to her work. Historically, she rests between the great female-led continental salons of the 18th century and the professional knowledge brokers of the 20th. Marcet in the 19th century helped to define the field.[19]

Jane Marcet lived for the rest of her life with her daughter in Piccadilly, London. She died there on 28 June 1858 leaving a legacy of her works.

Publications

Jane Marcet's publications included:[20][21]

  1. Conversations on Chemistry (1805)
  2. Conversations on Political Economy (1816)
  3. Conversations on Natural Philosophy (1820)
  4. Mary's Grammar (1835)
  5. John Hopkins's Notions on Political Economy (1833)
  6. Mrs Marcet's Story-Book: Being a Selection from the Stories Contained in Her Books for Little Children (1858)
  7. The seasons, stories for very young children, by the author of 'Conversations on chemistry' (1832)
  8. Willy's Grammar – Scholar's Choice Edition
  9. Pamphlet Essays: Under the Superintendence of the Society for the Improvement of the Working Population in the County of Glamorgan
  10. Mrs Marcet's Story-Book – Scholar's Choice Edition
  11. Controlling State Crime
  12. Bertha's Visit to her Uncle in England. By Jane Marcet (1830)
  13. Conversations on the History of England, for the Use of Children (1842)
  14. Conversations on the Evidence of Christianity in Which the Leading Arguments of the Best Authors Are Arranged, Developed, and Connected with Each Other for the Use of Young Persons and Theological Students
  15. The Seasons; Stories for Very Young Children; Spring. Vol. II
  16. Conversations on Vegetable Physiology: Volume 1: Comprehending the Elements of Botany, with Their Application to Agriculture
  17. Lessons on Animals, Vegetables, and Minerals - Scholar's Choice Edition (2015)

References

  1. ^ Marcet, Jane (1816). Conversations on the Nature of Political Economy (Public domain ed.). Transaction Publishers. pp. 16–. ISBN 978-1-4128-2037-0.
  2. ^ Childs, Peter E. (2019). "Elementary Chemistry: Mrs. Jane Marcet and the popularization of chemistry". In Lykknes, Annette; Van Tiggelen, Brigitte (eds.). Women in Their Element: Selected Women's Contributions To The Periodic System. Singapore: World Scientific.
  3. ^ a b c Rosenfeld, Louis (2001). "The Chemical Work of Alexander and Jane Marcet" (PDF). Clinical Chemistry. 47 (4): 784–792. doi:10.1093/clinchem/47.4.784. PMID 11274044.
  4. ^ a b Ogilvie, Marilyn; Harvey, Joy Dorothy, eds. (2000). The biographical dictionary of women in science. New York [u.a.]: Routledge. p. 842. ISBN 978-0415920384.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Morse, Elizabeth J. "Marcet, Jane Haldimand (1769–1858)" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2004). Retrieved 9 September 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Jane Marcet". Science History Institute. June 2016. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  7. ^ Edgeworth, Maria (1895). Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert (ed.). The Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and company. p. 354.
  8. ^ Behrman, Joanna (1 August 2022). "Physics … is for girls?". Physics Today. 75 (8): 30–36. doi:10.1063/PT.3.5061. ISSN 0031-9228. S2CID 251262099.
  9. ^ a b c d Bahar, Saba (18 April 2001). "Jane Marcet and the limits to public science". The British Journal for the History of Science. 34 (1). doi:10.1017/S0007087401004289. S2CID 145206176.
  10. ^ a b c d e Wood, Margaret E. (2010). "Mrs. Chemistry". Chemical Heritage Magazine. 28 (1). Retrieved 20 March 2018.
  11. ^ Marcet, Jane Haldimand (1816). Conversations on Political Economy. London: Longman. p. 11.
  12. ^ Henderson, William (1995). Economics as Literature. London: Routledge. p. 56. ISBN 978-0203025451.
  13. ^ a b Tikkanen, Amy. "Jane Marcet". Britannica.
  14. ^ a b "Jane Marcet". Famous Scientists.
  15. ^ Lindee, M. Susan (March 1991). "The American Career of Jane Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry, 1806-1853". Isis. 82 (1): 8–23. doi:10.1086/355635. S2CID 144324281.
  16. ^ White, Olive B. "Condensed from: Centennial History of the Girls' High School of Boston". Girls' High School of Boston Alumnae. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  17. ^ Jane Marcet (1816). "Conversation on Nature of Political Economy". Google books.
  18. ^ Shackleton, J. R. (December 1990). "Jane Marcet and Harriet Martineau: pioneers of economics education". History of Education. 19 (4): 283–297. doi:10.1080/0046760900190402.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Forget, Evelyn L. (2016). "Jane Marcet and the Scholarship of Popularization". ASSA Annual Meeting 2016. University of Manitoba: American Economic Association.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  20. ^ "Results for 'jane marcet' [WorldCat.org]". www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  21. ^ "Full-text Advanced Search Results | HathiTrust Digital Library". babel.hathitrust.org. Retrieved 7 November 2018.

Further reading

  • Armstrong, Eva (February 1938). "Jane Marcet and her "Conversations on Chemistry"". Journal of Chemical Education. 15 (2): 53–57. Bibcode:1938JChEd..15...53A. doi:10.1021/ed015p53.
  • Crellin, John K. (July 1979). "Mrs. Marcet's 'Conversations on Chemistry'". Journal of Chemical Education. 56 (7): 459–460. Bibcode:1979JChEd..56..459C. doi:10.1021/ed056p459.
  • Golinski, Jan (1970–1980). "Marcet, Jane Haldimand". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 23. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 20–22. ISBN 978-0-684-10114-9.
  • Lindee, M. S. (1991). "The American career of Jane Marcet's Conversations on Chemistry, 1806 – 1853". Isis. 82: 8–23. doi:10.1086/355635. S2CID 144324281.
  • Marcet, Jane (1817). Conversations on Chemistry. London: Longman.
  • Martineau, Harriet (1869). Biographical Sketches. New York: Leypoldt and Holt. pp. 70–76.
  • Rosenfeld, Louis (2001). "The Chemical Work of Alexander and Jane Marcet" (PDF). Clinical Chemistry. 47 (4): 784–792. doi:10.1093/clinchem/47.4.784. PMID 11274044.
  • Rossotti, Hazel (June 2007). "The Woman That Inspired Faraday". Chemistry World: 58–61.
  • Lienhard, John H. (1992). "Jane Marcet's Books". The Engines of Our Ingenuity. Episode 744. NPR. KUHF-FM Houston.

External links

jane, marcet, née, haldimand, ɑːr, january, 1769, june, 1858, english, salonnière, swiss, origin, innovative, writer, popular, explanatory, science, books, also, broke, ground, with, conversations, political, economy, 1816, which, explain, ideas, adam, smith, . Jane Marcet nee Haldimand ˈ m ɑːr s ɛ t 1 January 1769 28 June 1858 was an English salonniere of Swiss origin 1 and an innovative writer of popular explanatory science books She also broke ground with Conversations on Political Economy 1816 which explain the ideas of Adam Smith Malthus and David Ricardo Jane MarcetBornJanuary 1 1769London UKDiedJune 28 1858Scientific careerFieldsChemistry Contents 1 Life 2 Conversations 3 Legacy 3 1 Intellectual legacy 3 2 Scholarship and popularisation 4 Publications 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife EditJane Marcet was born in London on 1 January 1769 one of twelve children of a wealthy Genevan merchant and banker Anthony Francis Haldimand 1740 41 1817 and his wife Jane died 1785 She was educated at home with her brothers Her studies included Latin essential for the sciences chemistry biology and history and topics more usual for young ladies in England 2 3 Jane took over the running of the family at age 15 after her mother s death 4 She managed the house and helped to bring up her younger siblings Her younger brother William Haldimand 1784 1862 became a director of the Bank of England and a member of Parliament 5 She also acted as her father s hostess helping to entertain frequent parties of scientific and literary guests 3 Jane developed an early interest in painting during a visit to Italy with her father in 1796 and studied with Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Lawrence 5 Her artistic training later enabled her to illustrate her books Jane was married in 1799 to Alexander John Gaspard Marcet 1770 1822 a political exile from Geneva Switzerland who graduated from medical school at the University of Edinburgh as a physician in 1797 After their marriage the Marcets continued to live in London 6 They had four children one of whom Francois Marcet 1803 1883 became a well known physicist 5 Alexander was strongly interested in chemistry and became a lecturer at Guy s Hospital in London and a Fellow of the Royal Society 6 When Jane became interested in learning more about chemistry they conducted experiments together in a home laboratory discussing the scientific principles involved 3 5 The Marcets belonged in a literary and scientific social circle of leading writers and scientists such as Mary Somerville 6 Henry Hallam Harriet Martineau Auguste Arthur de la Rive and Maria Edgeworth 4 Novelist Maria Edgeworth described their home in her letters with lively intelligent children and a welcome for visitors 5 One Edgeworth anecdote gives a vivid picture of the Marcet family and its scientific and social activities We came here last Friday and have spent our time most happily with our excellent friend Mrs Marcet His children are all so fond of Dr Marcet we see that he is their companion and friend They have all been happily busy in making a paper fire balloon sixteen feet in diameter and thirty feet high A large company were invited to see it mount 7 Jane and her father were close throughout their lives He lived with her and her husband after their marriage When Jane s father died in 1817 she received a substantial legacy that enabled Alexander Marcet to give up his medical practice and devote himself to chemistry full time 6 Alexander in his turn understood and supported his wife s need for intellectual engagement and productive work 5 Conversations EditAfter helping to read the proofs of one of her husband s books Marcet decided to write her own She produced expository books on chemistry botany religion and economics under the general title Conversations In her prefaces Marcet addresses whether such knowledge is suitable for women arguing against objections and stating that public opinion supports her view 5 The first was written in 1805 though not issued until 1819 as Conversations on Natural Philosophy It covered the basics of scientific knowledge of the time physics mechanics astronomy the properties of fluids air and optics 5 It set a common format for her works a dialogue between two pupils Caroline and Emily or Emilie and their teacher Mrs Bryant Mrs B 6 8 Caroline the younger asks flippant questions that still move the dialogue along while Emily is more controlled and reflective Mrs Bryant is a maternal mentoring figure who leads them to question and examine their ideas Both the scientific content and the discursive process of sharing scientific knowledge were important to Marcet s readers 9 Conversations on Chemistry Title page Twelfth edition 1832 Chemical Heritage Foundation Plate from Jane Marcet s Conversations on Chemistry Marcet s next book Conversations on Chemistry Intended More Especially for the Female Sex appeared anonymously in 1805 5 and became her best known work In summarizing and popularising the work of Humphry Davy whose lectures she attended it was one of the first elementary science textbooks It came with Marcet s drawings of chemical apparatus 10 and stressed the need for experiment and for theoretical rigour 5 Jane Marcet was not explicitly identified as the author until the 12th edition of 1832 10 The book went into 16 editions in England where it was an early inspiration for the young Michael Faraday 6 It was widely plagiarised in America appearing there in at least 23 editions 5 Marcet in her Conversations on Political Economy 1816 also popularised the arguments of such political economists as Adam Smith Malthus and above all David Ricardo This was well received and widely read though some later economists such as Alfred Marshall were dismissive to the detriment of its later reputation and Joseph Schumpeter derided it as economics for schoolgirls 5 The purpose however was an important one that went beyond the lucrative demands of a niche market Mrs B s flippant pupil Caroline says she would have thought a woman could be excused ignorance of that topic Mrs B replies tartly When you plead in favour of ignorance there is a strong presumption that you are in the wrong 11 Marcet s Conversations on Political Economy were an inspiration to Harriet Martineau to introduce economic topics into her writings 5 12 In 1820 the Marcets travelled to Geneva Switzerland intending to relocate there In 1822 Alexander died unexpectedly while on a visit to Britain to Jane s extreme distress She went through one of several periods of depression that affected her life described by her friend Auguste de La Rive as a shadow enveloping an energetic and active spirit 5 She retained strong ties to her Swiss friends but eventually returned to live in England 5 There she remained active in scientific circles and updated and published new editions of her major works throughout her life Her last edition of Conversations on Chemistry appeared when she was 84 In later life Marcet wrote new works mainly for children perhaps with her grandchildren in mind Mary s Grammar 1835 became a classic 5 Jane Marcet lived for the latter part of her life with a daughter at 14 Stratton Street Piccadilly London She died there on 28 June 1858 5 Legacy EditMarcet s major contribution was her work as an educator 5 Her work contained few original ideas but rested on careful study of current theories and voluminous ongoing correspondence with current scientists It was noted for precision accuracy and thoroughness She presented science and economics in an informal way but her simple introductions to often complex subjects were widely appreciated by adults as well as children Perhaps most importantly they reached women including students in prominent women s seminaries who had not been encouraged to explore the experimental sciences at the time 9 Marcet was uniquely qualified to popularise chemistry and economics by her contacts with many of the greatest thinkers and scientists of her day She deserves much credit in the new fields of chemistry and political economy By writing in discursive English she made scientific knowledge accessible not only to women but to men not trained in the fundamental languages of a classical education Latin and Greek While her original intent was to educate women she reached a broader audience in line with enlightenment ideals and laid claim to the natural sciences as a public endeavour 9 When the Boston Girls High and Normal School became the first school in America to teach science to women through laboratory experience in 1865 Marcet s Conversations on Chemistry was the text chosen 10 Her works remained standard textbooks even When Henry James wrote The Turn of the Screw in 1898 The governess refers offhandedly to a text being as impersonal as Mrs Marcet or nine times nine Intellectual legacy Edit One of those who read Jane s work was Michael Faraday born in 1791 who would become one of the world s greatest scientists revolutionizing physics and chemistry He was impressed by her work on chemistry which helped him to find a new calling for science He later claimed it had played a vital role in his own career as a chemist 13 Faraday remarked When I came to know Mrs Marcet personally how often I cast my thoughts backwards delighting to connect the past and the present how often when sending a paper to her as a thank you offering I thought of my first instructress 14 The book aimed to help others who were bewildered by chemistry by explaining better but remaining scientifically accurate It was a user friendly book The subjects were divided into two parts each of more than 300 pages It is framed by conversations between an adult teacher and two children Marcet also added her own figures to explain chemistry in an easy way 10 In England 16 editions of Conversations on Chemistry were published up to the 1830s with all inclusive updates She influenced many individuals all over the world Girls and others who were not wealthy were pursuing the subject and able to get along with it 9 Marcet s active support for teaching chemistry to beginners through an experimental laboratory was recognized by many After the Civil War laboratory instruction was becoming the norm in American schools Despite competition from many other authors and books Marcet s ruled in the female advancement of knowledge 6 Its popularity even in the early 1900s suggests increasing acceptance by American schools to including basic subjects of theoretical and experimental science in the education of females This availability of education set the platform for increasing women s engagements in science She inspired many of the greatest chemists scientists and Mathematicians in history Mary Somerville born in 1790 the mathematician after whom The University of Oxford s first women s college was named said of Jane Marcet No one at this time can duly estimate the importance of Mrs Marcet s scientific works 6 The book remained popular in the United States partly through the publishing of nearly two dozen derivative editions by John Lee Comstock and others Lack of international copyright laws at the time meant that Marcet did not control or receive payment for these editions 15 Having become a standard textbook in Britain and United States it was translated into German and French In the United States Boston s Girls High School and Normal School became the first school to teach science to women through laboratory experience in 1865 based on the text of Marcet s Conversations on Chemistry 10 16 Jane was inspired by the work economists of David Ricardo Adam Smith and many others When writing Conversations on Political Economy in 1816 which notably drew attention to the arguments based on notable works by some famous economists It targeted the general idea of economics with liberating and educating poor people irrespective of sex It embraced general notions of political economy with the distribution of property taxes the division of labour on capital and on the wages population and social predicament of the poor 13 In a letter to Pierre Prevost Marcet stated I can assure you that the greatest pleasure I derive from success is the hope of doing good by the propagation of useful truths amongst a class of people who excepting in a popular familiar form would never have become acquainted with them 17 The book became a popular read although some later economists like Alfred Marshall showed indifference to it which damaged her reputation Joseph Schumpeter mocked it as economics for schoolgirls The aim of her book was an important one that went beyond the moneymaking for small markets It was intended to popularize the lessons of political economy for the self improving working classes and school curricula It attempted to simplify the economics for the fewer privileged audience and educate younger people in the principle of economics by which markets are regulated using simple tales Marcet s Conversations on Political Economy inspired Harriet Martineau a British social theorist and Whig writer often cited as the first female sociologist to introduce economic topics into her writings 18 She was inspired to teach the principles of economics not by pressing them into a story but by displaying their natural workings in selected phases of life It followed a style resembling that of her previous book and likewise became popular Marcet inherited considerable properties from her father in 1817 She and her husband moved to Geneva in the 1820s but two years later Alexander died Jane eventually returned in London where she again drew together prominent intellectuals and bankers Her later works largely focus on less demanding topics and were intended in most cases for a younger audience 6 Further success came with the 1819 publication of Conversations on Natural Philosophy which she had written before Conversations on Chemistry She did not acknowledge herself as author until 1832 Her other notable books in the period included Mary s Grammar 1835 6 Marcet s early anonymity left it open for male authors in the United States to supplement and issue their editions of Jane s work in their own invented language and place their names on the book s title page as authors When Marcet published the 12th edition under her own name it created a situation of chaos among the published books but nothing happened in the end Lack of international copyright laws meant Jane never received royalties for any US editions under the names of other authors 6 Marcet went on to publish several other popular works including Conversations on Political Economy and Conversations on Plant Physiology but none became as widely read as Conversations on Chemistry With each successive edition Marcet continued to update the book She wrote to Michael Faraday in 1845 an esteemed writer and a member of the prestigious Royal Society for detailed and expanded information on his research He presented his latest breakthroughs to the woman who had first set him on his chemical journey 14 Scholarship and popularisation Edit Jane Marcet spread knowledge by easing its creation sharing and use She created and maintained social and intellectual ties among scientists elites literary writers economists and the wider public She worked on the boundaries of various objects of discussion from which knowledge flowed in all directions Those showing respect for her ideas on political economy included Thomas Robert Malthus and James Mill 19 Willie Henderson tried to frame Jane as an educational broker arguing that to change the perspectives of others minds was mere capitalist propaganda for sophisticated curriculum development 19 For Jane communication was not a one way activity It conveyed a message and made the public aware of the ideas of professionals who in turn were provided with new challenges by her facilitation of two way communication She brought a deep perception of classical economics to bear on social questions by counterposing the prejudices and popular feeling of uninformed benevolence 19 Furthermore she introduced the insights of continental thinkers into the writings of the English classical school so challenging them to decide what was peripheral and what central to the story This included consolidating the ideas of bankers political actors and business people as professional political economists 19 Marcet kept herself distant from people with central dogmas of classical economics but kept the conversation going with the masters of them She was tough about accepting criticism but at other times kept her directions to herself While teaching wisdom through professionals to the untaught public she also built up the networks that focused on her direct engagement to transmit the conversation to the people 19 Marcet s Conversations on Political Economy appeared in 14 editions and was translated into Dutch German Spanish and twice French It had a strong impact on young writers and popularisers like Harriet Martineau Jean Baptiste Say Millicent Garrett Fawcett on great political economists such as Malthus JS Mill and many more and on politicians and bankers with whom she had social ties 19 This made her one of the great early 1900s popularizers of political economy her information flow being central to her work Historically she rests between the great female led continental salons of the 18th century and the professional knowledge brokers of the 20th Marcet in the 19th century helped to define the field 19 Jane Marcet lived for the rest of her life with her daughter in Piccadilly London She died there on 28 June 1858 leaving a legacy of her works Publications EditJane Marcet s publications included 20 21 Conversations on Chemistry 1805 Conversations on Political Economy 1816 Conversations on Natural Philosophy 1820 Mary s Grammar 1835 John Hopkins s Notions on Political Economy 1833 Mrs Marcet s Story Book Being a Selection from the Stories Contained in Her Books for Little Children 1858 The seasons stories for very young children by the author of Conversations on chemistry 1832 Willy s Grammar Scholar s Choice Edition Pamphlet Essays Under the Superintendence of the Society for the Improvement of the Working Population in the County of Glamorgan Mrs Marcet s Story Book Scholar s Choice Edition Controlling State Crime Bertha s Visit to her Uncle in England By Jane Marcet 1830 Conversations on the History of England for the Use of Children 1842 Conversations on the Evidence of Christianity in Which the Leading Arguments of the Best Authors Are Arranged Developed and Connected with Each Other for the Use of Young Persons and Theological Students The Seasons Stories for Very Young Children Spring Vol II Conversations on Vegetable Physiology Volume 1 Comprehending the Elements of Botany with Their Application to Agriculture Lessons on Animals Vegetables and Minerals Scholar s Choice Edition 2015 References Edit Marcet Jane 1816 Conversations on the Nature of Political Economy Public domain ed Transaction Publishers pp 16 ISBN 978 1 4128 2037 0 Childs Peter E 2019 Elementary Chemistry Mrs Jane Marcet and the popularization of chemistry In Lykknes Annette Van Tiggelen Brigitte eds Women in Their Element Selected Women s Contributions To The Periodic System Singapore World Scientific a b c Rosenfeld Louis 2001 The Chemical Work of Alexander and Jane Marcet PDF Clinical Chemistry 47 4 784 792 doi 10 1093 clinchem 47 4 784 PMID 11274044 a b Ogilvie Marilyn Harvey Joy Dorothy eds 2000 The biographical dictionary of women in science New York u a Routledge p 842 ISBN 978 0415920384 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Morse Elizabeth J Marcet Jane Haldimand 1769 1858 in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press September 2004 Retrieved 9 September 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k Jane Marcet Science History Institute June 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2018 Edgeworth Maria 1895 Hare Augustus John Cuthbert ed The Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin and company p 354 Behrman Joanna 1 August 2022 Physics is for girls Physics Today 75 8 30 36 doi 10 1063 PT 3 5061 ISSN 0031 9228 S2CID 251262099 a b c d Bahar Saba 18 April 2001 Jane Marcet and the limits to public science The British Journal for the History of Science 34 1 doi 10 1017 S0007087401004289 S2CID 145206176 a b c d e Wood Margaret E 2010 Mrs Chemistry Chemical Heritage Magazine 28 1 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Marcet Jane Haldimand 1816 Conversations on Political Economy London Longman p 11 Henderson William 1995 Economics as Literature London Routledge p 56 ISBN 978 0203025451 a b Tikkanen Amy Jane Marcet Britannica a b Jane Marcet Famous Scientists Lindee M Susan March 1991 The American Career of Jane Marcet s Conversations on Chemistry 1806 1853 Isis 82 1 8 23 doi 10 1086 355635 S2CID 144324281 White Olive B Condensed from Centennial History of the Girls High School of Boston Girls High School of Boston Alumnae Retrieved 31 January 2020 Jane Marcet 1816 Conversation on Nature of Political Economy Google books Shackleton J R December 1990 Jane Marcet and Harriet Martineau pioneers of economics education History of Education 19 4 283 297 doi 10 1080 0046760900190402 a b c d e f g Forget Evelyn L 2016 Jane Marcet and the Scholarship of Popularization ASSA Annual Meeting 2016 University of Manitoba American Economic Association a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Results for jane marcet WorldCat org www worldcat org Retrieved 7 November 2018 Full text Advanced Search Results HathiTrust Digital Library babel hathitrust org Retrieved 7 November 2018 Further reading EditArmstrong Eva February 1938 Jane Marcet and her Conversations on Chemistry Journal of Chemical Education 15 2 53 57 Bibcode 1938JChEd 15 53A doi 10 1021 ed015p53 Crellin John K July 1979 Mrs Marcet s Conversations on Chemistry Journal of Chemical Education 56 7 459 460 Bibcode 1979JChEd 56 459C doi 10 1021 ed056p459 Golinski Jan 1970 1980 Marcet Jane Haldimand Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 23 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 20 22 ISBN 978 0 684 10114 9 Lindee M S 1991 The American career of Jane Marcet s Conversations on Chemistry 1806 1853 Isis 82 8 23 doi 10 1086 355635 S2CID 144324281 Marcet Jane 1817 Conversations on Chemistry London Longman Martineau Harriet 1869 Biographical Sketches New York Leypoldt and Holt pp 70 76 Rosenfeld Louis 2001 The Chemical Work of Alexander and Jane Marcet PDF Clinical Chemistry 47 4 784 792 doi 10 1093 clinchem 47 4 784 PMID 11274044 Rossotti Hazel June 2007 The Woman That Inspired Faraday Chemistry World 58 61 Lienhard John H 1992 Jane Marcet s Books The Engines of Our Ingenuity Episode 744 NPR KUHF FM Houston External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Jane Haldimand Marcet Lee Sidney ed 1893 Marcet Jane Dictionary of National Biography Vol 36 London Smith Elder amp Co Works by Jane Marcet at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Jane Marcet at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Jane Marcet at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jane Marcet amp oldid 1129528153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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