"The author demonstrates a clear understanding of both the scientific
concepts at stake in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and the
way Spanish thinkers and writers grappled with the conflictive issues
resulting from scientific advances. This study is a fresh approach,
bringing to the attention of the academic audience, including historians
and philosophers of science, and literary scholars, a new corpus of
material treated in a quite unique way." Floyd Merrell, author
of Unthinking Thinking: Jorge Luis Borges, Mathematics, and the New
Physics
"In this valuable contribution to Spanish cultural and literary
studies, Dale J. Pratt examines the doing of science in Spain,
the integration of scientific principles into Spain's thought,
and the place of science in social discourse as a marker of Spain's
entering into modernity. A helpful introduction traces the history
of these three elements to 1868 and prepares the reader for Pratt's
study of the place of science in late ninteenth and early twentieth
century Spanish literature, specifiaclly in novels, short stories
and essays. The last chapter and conclusion examine the evolution
of science's role in Spanish culture into the years of the Franco
regime. … Signs of Science offers insightful discussion
of the image of science in Spanish cutlure. Because of Pratt's
effective choice and comprehensive analysis of authors and texts
and the cultural context which produced the "signs of science"
they read, this reader highly recommends Signs of Science
for any student of Spanish Literature and Culture." Cecelia
J. Cavanaugh, Hispanófila
For complete review see Hispanófila 140 (2004): 156-58.
"Pratt skillfully analyzes the Spanish reception of evolution,
Darwinism, and other scientific theories of the 19th century through
literary images of science and scientists....Pratt offers a logical
presentation with numerous examples and accurate notes." M. V.
Ekstrom, Choice
Read the complete review in Choice 2001.
"Another dimension of Pratt's book is very positive and
deserves discussion. Unlike many Spanish and Hispanist writers
of the twentieth century, who tended to share Ortega's penchant
for declaring most of the Spanish past, especially the nineteenth
century, to have been pernicious for the country and deserving
of scorn and oblivion, Pratt takes another tack. He discovers
the elements of continuity from the realist/naturalists through
Martín Santos, as well as identifies, in Cajal for example,
strikingly innovative strains in Spanish literature and culture.
… Writing in a time that is making increasingly irrelevant
the internecine ideological battling typical of so much Spanish
literary and cultural historiography since 1898, Pratt's clear-eyed
analyses produce optimism. If a problem or set of problems can
be so clearly understood as they are in Pratt, then there is hope
that they can be resolved and that progress will follow. Stephen
Miller, Hispania
Read the complete review in Hispania 86 (Mar. 2003): 51-52.
"Dale Pratt has here written an astute commentary on the literary
reflections of that polemic [over the role of science in Spanish culture
and society] and the idiosyncratic way in which writers dealt with science
as both sign and signifier." Thomas F. Glick, Isis
Read the complete review in Isis 93.3 (2002): 467-68.
"Signalling Spain's relationship with science as key to
Spain's membership in modern Europe, Dale Pratt sets out in this
study to track a dialogue in process from 1870 to 1970: the place
of science in Spanish culture. … If the author in the end
draws back from sweeping conclusions, he has none the less opened
up areas of interest and enquiry." —Alison Sinclair,
Modern Language Review
For the complete review, see Modern Language Review
98.4 (Oct. 2003): 1014-15.
For another review, see Reference & Research Book News
1 May 1001.