Given the pervasive nature of private philanthropy during
the long nineteenth century, its influence on the basic institutions of society
was inescapable. In the uneven march toward the modern welfare state,
fluctuating government policy dictated the scope of the public sector and the
space for private volunteerism, and philanthropists became increasingly
effective at shaping policy debates. With the growth of charitable
organizations came the development of presumably scientific and disinterested methods
of coordinating and systematizing relief, often in order to discriminate
between the deserving and the undeserving poor. Examining the discourse
involved in these methods illuminates the complex motives behind charity work
and the ways in which nineteenth-century philanthropy worked hand-in-hand with
the other institutions of its day.
Literature of the period both reflected these issues and
sought to influence debates over the nature and function of philanthropy. While
some social reform writers adopted philanthropy as the figure for their own
artistic endeavors, others militated against its rising influence—Carlyle
characterized the new phenomenon of “philanthropology” as a “sugary, disastrous
jargon.” Many writers, understanding its polarizing energy, made it a central
theme of their works.
We propose a collection of essays addressing the function of
philanthropy in British and American writing of the long nineteenth
century. Essays should explore the multi-faceted nature of philanthropic
discourse and try to account for its prominent and dynamic role in the
literature of the period.
Possible topics include:
- Philanthropy as social classification: modes of discrimination, the “deserving poor,” detecting pauperism
- The science of charity: ethics, altruism, philanthropy in evolutionary thought, moral and social psychology—Darwin, Spencer, Bain, etc.
- The economics of philanthropy: business models, paving the way for the welfare state, criminal philanthropists
- Lady Bountiful: women’s contributions to charity work and philanthropic constructions of gender
- Imperial philanthropy: transnational exchange, colonial subjects as philanthropists, negotiating competing ideologies of race and nation, abolitionist discourses
- The “Ragged-Trousered Philanthropists”: self-help societies, the poor as philanthropists, reverse philanthropy
- Educational philanthropy: ragged schools, Sunday schools, working men’s institutions
- Competing ideologies of philanthropy: political economy, religion, socialism, utopianism
- Philanthropic fiction: authorship as philanthropy, depictions of charity in mass media, philanthropic print culture, satirical portraits
Please send a 500-word proposal and 1-page vita by August 10th, 2012 to:
Frank Christianson
Associate Professor of English
Brigham Young University
Leslee Thorne-Murphy
Associate Professor of English
Brigham Young University