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What Becomes of Pollution?

Book

What Becomes of Pollution?

DOI link for What Becomes of Pollution?

What Becomes of Pollution? book

Adversary Science and the Controversy on the Self-Purification of Rivers in Britain, 1850-1900

What Becomes of Pollution?

DOI link for What Becomes of Pollution?

What Becomes of Pollution? book

Adversary Science and the Controversy on the Self-Purification of Rivers in Britain, 1850-1900
ByChristopher Hamlin
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1987
eBook Published 14 November 2019
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429344602
Pages 640
eBook ISBN 9780429344602
Subjects Economics, Finance, Business & Industry, Environment and Sustainability
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Hamlin, C. (1987). What Becomes of Pollution?: Adversary Science and the Controversy on the Self-Purification of Rivers in Britain, 1850-1900 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429344602

ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1987, this volume examines the ideals and realities of river use in 19th Century Britain and the failure of legal and technological remedies for river pollution. It deals with the involvement of scientists, particularly chemists, in pollution inquiries and considers the effects on the normal workings of the scientific community of scientists’ participation in the adversary forums in which water and sewage policy was made. It discusses 19th ideas of decomposition, disease causation and purification and examines the gap between the abilities of science and the needs of society that developed as the existence of water-borne disease became increasingly clear. It also deals with the politicization of water bacteriology and the emergence of a technology of biological sewage treatment from a political context.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter I|47 pages

Duties, Disputes, And Deceptions: Rivers And British Society 1850-1900

chapter II|34 pages

Routes To Reputation: Science In An Adversary Context

chapter III|52 pages

The Antithesis Of Life: Decomposition In Victorian Science And Medicine

chapter IV|71 pages

Biological Purification: 1850-1880

chapter V|57 pages

From Sensibility To Nihilism: Water Quality And Self-Purification 1850-1860

chapter VI|24 pages

The Triumph Of Nihilism, 1860-68

chapter VII|71 pages

The Radicalization of a Water Scientist

Edward Frankland and the London Water Controversy, 1866-69

chapter VIII|67 pages

Politics and Credibility

Frankland and Self-Purification, 1868-1881

chapter IX and X|54 pages

Biology Acquires a Constituency

chapter X|61 pages

Biology Acquires A Constituency II: Organisms And The Politics Of Sewage Treatment

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion: Society, Science, And Self-Purification

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