fiction.wikisort.org - WriterEdward Williams Byron Nicholson (16 March 1849 – 17 March 1912) was a British author and Bodley's Librarian, the head of the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford, from 1882 until his death in 1912.
Edward Nicholson |
---|
 |
Born | Edward Williams Byron Nicholson (1849-03-16)16 March 1849
|
---|
Died | 17 March 1912(1912-03-17) (aged 63)
Oxford, England |
---|
Nationality | British |
---|
Occupation | Author, librarian |
---|
Spouse(s) | |
---|
Children | 3 |
---|
Early life and career
Nicholson was born in St. Helier, Jersey. His father, a former member of the Royal Navy, participated in the California Gold Rush and died in America, leaving Nicholson's mother in poverty. She moved back to her mother's house in Llanrwst, north Wales. Nicholson was educated at Llanrwst Grammar School, Liverpool College (for one term) and Tonbridge School. He studied at Trinity College, Oxford, from 1867, initially reading classics before obtaining a third-class degree in Law and Modern History in 1871. During his time at Oxford, he won the Gaisford Prize for Greek Verse in 1871 and the Hall-Houghton Junior Greek Testament Prize in 1872.[1] Nicholson married Helen Grant on 1 February 1876; they had three daughters.[1]
Nicholson had been the librarian at Tonbridge School and was the honorary Librarian of the Oxford Union Society from 1872 to 1873, and produced catalogues of the contents of each library, demonstrating his aptitude for cataloguing.[1][2] After spending some time teaching, he became Principal Librarian and Superintendent of the London Institution in 1873. He reinvigorated the organisation, which promoted education through lectures and a library, and helped to increase its activities, membership and income, as well as the quality of its library. An international conference of librarians was held in London in 1877, largely through his work, leading with his help to the foundation of the Library Association of the United Kingdom. He was a council member until 1881, when he resigned complaining that the council had failed to instigate "one single improvement however trifling in library-management or library-appliances".[1]
Oxford
Bodley's Librarian (the head of the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford), Henry Octavius Coxe, died in 1881. Nicholson applied for the post, relying on his experience as a librarian and his organisational skills to compensate his lack of experience in palaeography, bibliography and languages. He was a surprise choice, as the position had traditionally been held by scholar-librarians, but he had the support of Benjamin Jowett (Vice-Chancellor of the University from 1882 and Master of Balliol College) and others who thought that the Bodleian needed reform. The library was cramped, under-staffed and poorly catalogued, but was still regarded as one of the leading libraries in the world. Nicholson instituted a number of reforms and improvements: he obtained further space for the library in the rooms of nearby buildings; he changed the system of cataloguing; more books were acquired; open access to some reference books in the Radcliffe Camera was introduced; and boys were employed to carry out some tasks, freeing up the time of the more experienced staff. However, these changes had internal opponents, including Falconer Madan, the senior Sub-Librarian (and Nicholson's eventual successor). The battles between Nicholson and some of his staff, which included anonymous complaints in newspapers, were an ongoing problem and affected Nicholson's health. One writer, however, later said of Nicholson, "I have always regarded him as almost the refounder of the Library".[1]
The library continued to suffer from inadequate space and money, but Nicholson made the most of the building and his staff, even though increasing the number of books added pressure on the available space. Nicholson proposed an underground book store in 1899 and work on this (the first specially-constructed underground book store to be built), along with other expansion work, began in 1907. However, by this time, his struggles and hard work had affected his health: he was confirmed as suffering from heart disease in 1890, he had a breakdown in 1901, and collapsed in the street in 1907 on two occasions. His last dispute with staff concerned his decision to appoint a woman to a permanent position. He was very reluctant to take a leave of absence from the library, suspecting motivations behind the suggestions, but finally did so less than a month before his death.
Outside the library, he enjoyed chess, swimming, cycling, and writing limericks. He was noted for his kindness and consideration, and was particularly appreciated by junior staff at the library.[1]
He died at home in Oxford on 17 March 1912.[1]
Animal rights
Nicholson was an early advocate of animal rights. He argued in his book, The Rights of an Animal (1879) that animals have the same natural right to life and liberty that human beings do, disregarding Descartes' mechanistic view—or what he called the "Neo-Cartesian snake"—that they lack consciousness. He argued that animals having no powers of reason is inconsistent with observations of household pets. Nicholson noted that animals like people, have nervous systems and experience pain and pleasure. He concluded that "animals have the same abstract rights of life and personal liberty with man."[3]
Nicholson dedicated the book to Arthur Helps and John Lawrence.[3] It contains a reprint of Lawrence's chapter "The Rights of Beasts".[4]
The book was criticized in the Nature journal, in 1879. The reviewer commented that "animals, as sentient creatures, have some rights—i.e., that man may not kill or torture them needlessly without incurring some moral blame—no one nowadays would undertake to dispute. It therefore seems useless to fill, a number of pages with a number of truisms on the theme that animals have some rights in common with man."[5]
Publications
Nicholson published on various topics, such as classical literature and Celtic antiquities.[1] His writings included:
- The Christ-Child, and other poems, 1877.
- The Rights of an Animal, 1879.
- The Bodleian Library in 1882–1887, 1888.
- Golspie, contributions to its folklore, collected and edited by Edward WB Nicholson London, 1897.
- The Gospel according to the Hebrews, 1879.
- Keltic Researches: Studies in the History and Distribution of the Ancient Goidelic Language and People. London, 1904.
- "The Vandals in Wessex", 1906.
- Can We Not Save Architecture in Oxford?, 1910.[2]
References
External links
Animal rights |
---|
Topics (overviews, concepts, issues, cases) |
---|
Overviews |
- Animal rights movement
- Animal rights by country or territory
- Anarchism and animal rights
- Animal rights and punk subculture
- Animal cruelty–Holocaust analogies
- Animal rights in Jainism, Hinduism, and Buddhism
- Christianity and animal rights
- History of animal rights
- List of international animal welfare conventions
- Moral status of animals in the ancient world
- Timeline of animal welfare and rights
- Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare
|
---|
Concepts |
- Abolitionism
- Ahimsa
- Animal cognition
- Animal consciousness
- Animal ethics
- Animal–industrial complex
- Animal law
- Animal protectionism
- Animal welfare
- Animal-free agriculture
- Anthrozoology
- Argument from marginal cases
- Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness
- Carnism
- Equal consideration of interests
- Ethics of eating meat
- Ethics of uncertain sentience
- Ethology
- Insects in ethics
- Meat paradox
- Nonviolence
- Open rescue
- Opposition to hunting
- Personism
- Replaceability argument
- Sentiocentrism
- Speciesism
- Veganism
- Vegaphobia
- Vegetarianism
|
---|
Issues | Animal agriculture |
- Animal product
- Battery cage
- Bile bear
- Chick culling
- Concentrated animal feeding operation
- Fish farming
- Fur farming
- Fur trade
- Insect farming
- Intensive animal farming
- Intensive pig farming
- Livestock
- Poultry farming
- Slaughterhouse
- Wildlife farming
|
---|
Animal testing |
- Animal testing on non-human primates
- Animal testing regulations
- Labcorp Drug Development
- Great ape research ban
- Green Scare
- Huntingdon Life Sciences
- Model organism
- Nafovanny
- Operation Backfire
|
---|
Animal welfare |
- Animal euthanasia
- Cruelty to animals
- Pain in animals
- Pain in amphibians
- Pain in cephalopods
- Pain in crustaceans
- Pain in fish
- Pain in invertebrates
- Pain and suffering in laboratory animals
- Welfare of farmed insects
|
---|
Fishing |
- Commercial fishing
- Fishing bait
- Recreational fishing
|
---|
Wild animals |
- Culling wildlife
- Hare coursing
- Hunting
- International primate trade
- Ivory trade
- Predation problem
- Wild animal suffering
- Wildlife management
|
---|
Other |
- Abandoned pets
- Animal sacrifice
- Animal trial
- Animals in sport
- Live food
|
---|
|
---|
Cases |
- Brown Dog affair
- Cambridge University primates
- McLibel case
- Pit of despair
- SHAC
- Silver Spring monkeys
- University of California, Riverside 1985 laboratory raid
- Unnecessary Fuss
- War of the currents
|
---|
|
|
Advocates (academics, writers, activists) |
---|
Academics and writers | Contemporary |
- Carol J. Adams
- Kristin Andrews
- Tom Beauchamp
- Marc Bekoff
- Steven Best
- Paola Cavalieri
- Stephen R. L. Clark
- Alasdair Cochrane
- J. M. Coetzee
- Alice Crary
- David DeGrazia
- Daniel Dombrowski
- Sue Donaldson
- Josephine Donovan
- Catia Faria
- Lawrence Finsen
- Gary L. Francione
- Robert Garner
- Valéry Giroux
- John Hadley
- Oscar Horta
- Dale Jamieson
- Kyle Johannsen
- Melanie Joy
- Hilda Kean
- Will Kymlicka
- Renan Larue
- Thomas Lepeltier
- Andrew Linzey
- Clair Linzey
- Dan Lyons
- David Nibert
- Martha Nussbaum
- David Pearce
- Siobhan O'Sullivan
- Clare Palmer
- Evelyn Pluhar
- Mark Rowlands
- Richard D. Ryder
- Peter Singer
- Jérôme Segal
- Steve F. Sapontzis
- Jeff Sebo
- Gary Steiner
- Cass Sunstein
- David Sztybel
- Michael Tye
- Tatjana Višak
- Paul Waldau
- Steven M. Wise
- Corey Lee Wrenn
|
---|
Historical | |
---|
|
---|
Activists | Contemporary |
- Massinissa Akandouch
- James Aspey
- Greg Avery
- Matt Ball
- Martin Balluch
- Carole Baskin
- Barbi Twins
- Brigitte Bardot
- Bob Barker
- Gene Baur
- Yves Bonnardel
- Joey Carbstrong
- Jake Conroy
- Rod Coronado
- Karen Davis
- Karen Dawn
- Chris DeRose
- John Feldmann
- Bruce Friedrich
- Juliet Gellatley
- Tal Gilboa
- Antoine Goetschel
- Mark Gold
- Brigitte Gothière
- Wayne Hsiung
- Ronnie Lee
- Howard Lyman
- Evanna Lynch
- Bill Maher
- Keith Mann
- Jim Mason
- Dan Mathews
- Jo-Anne McArthur
- Luísa Mell
- Ingrid Newkirk
- Heather Nicholson
- Jack Norris
- David Olivier
- Alex Pacheco
- Craig Rosebraugh
- Nathan Runkle
- Jasmin Singer
- Kim Stallwood
- Marianne Thieme
- Darren Thurston
- Wendy Turner-Webster
- Jerry Vlasak
- Louise Wallis
- Gary Yourofsky
- That Vegan Teacher
|
---|
Historical | |
---|
|
---|
|
|
Movement (groups, parties) |
---|
Groups | Contemporary |
- Animal Aid
- Animal Ethics
- Animal Justice Project
- Animal Legal Defense Fund
- Animal Liberation
- Animal Liberation Front
- Anonymous for the Voiceless
- Centre for Animals and Social Justice
- Chinese Animal Protection Network
- Cruelty Free International
- Direct Action Everywhere
- Equanimal
- Farm Animal Rights Movement
- Faunalytics
- Great Ape Project
- Hunt Saboteurs Association
- In Defense of Animals
- Korea Animal Rights Advocates
- L214
- Last Chance for Animals
- Mercy for Animals
- New England Anti-Vivisection Society
- Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics
- People for Animals
- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
- Sentience Politics
- Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
- United Poultry Concerns
- UPF-Centre for Animal Ethics
- Voice for Animals Humane Society
|
---|
Historical |
- Animal Defence and Anti-Vivisection Society
- Humanitarian League (1891–1919)
- Oxford Group
|
---|
|
---|
Parties |
- Animal Justice Party (Australia)
- Animal Politics EU (Europe)
- Animal Protection Party of Canada (Canada)
- Animal Welfare Party (UK)
- Animal Justice Party of Finland (Finland)
- Animalist Party Against Mistreatment of Animals (Spain)
- DierAnimal (Belgium)
- Human Environment Animal Protection (Germany)
- Italian Animalist Party (Italy)
- Party for Animal Welfare (Ireland)
- Party for the Animals (Netherlands)
- People Animals Nature (Portugal)
- V-Partei³ (Germany)
|
---|
|
|
Media (books, films, periodicals, albums) |
---|
Books |
- Moral Inquiries on the Situation of Man and of Brutes (1824)
- Animals' Rights (1892)
- Evolutional Ethics and Animal Psychology (1897)
- The Universal Kinship (1906)
- The New Ethics (1907)
- Animals, Men and Morals (1971)
- Animal Liberation (1975)
- The Case for Animal Rights (1983)
- Morals, Reason, and Animals (1987)
- Do Animals Have Rights? (1998)
- The Lives of Animals (1999)
- Striking at the Roots (2008)
- An American Trilogy (2009)
- An Introduction to Animals and Political Theory (2010)
- Animal Rights Without Liberation (2012)
- Political Animals and Animal Politics (2014)
- Animal (De)liberation (2016)
- Sentientist Politics (2018)
- Wild Animal Ethics (2020)
|
---|
Films | |
---|
Periodicals | Journals |
- Animal Sentience
- Between the Species
- Cahiers antispécistes
- Etica & Animali
- Journal of Animal Ethics
- Relations. Beyond Anthropocentrism
|
---|
Magazines |
- Arkangel
- Bite Back
- Muutoksen kevät
- No Compromise
- Satya
|
---|
|
---|
Albums | |
---|
|
|
Category ( 139 )
|
Bodley's Librarians |
---|
Librarians |
- Thomas James (1599)
- John Rouse (1620)
- Thomas Barlow (1652)
- Thomas Lockey (1660)
- Thomas Hyde (1665)
- John Hudson (1701)
- Joseph Bowles (1719)
- Robert Fysher (1729)
- Humphrey Owen (1747)
- John Price (1768)
- Bulkeley Bandinel (1813)
- Henry Coxe (1860)
- Edward Nicholson (1882)
- Falconer Madan (1912)
- Arthur Cowley (1919)
- Edmund Craster (1931)
- Harry Creswick (1945)
- Nowell Myres (1948)
- Robert Shackleton (1966)
- Richard Fifoot (1979)
- John Jolliffe (1982)
- David Vaisey (1986)
- Reginald Carr (1997)
- Sarah Thomas (2007)
- Richard Ovenden (2014)
| |
---|
Related pages |
- Bodleian Library
- Thomas Bodley
- Articles about the library's collection
|
---|
 University of Oxford portal |
Authority control  |
---|
General | |
---|
National libraries | |
---|
Biographical dictionaries | |
---|
Other | |
---|
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии