Javascript must be enabled to continue!
An Infinity of Things
View through CrossRef
Abstract
An Infinity of Things tells the story of one of the largest private collections ever created, and the life of the man behind it. Welcome planned a great museum filled with treasures from all corners of the globe, charting the history of human health from prehistory to the present day. The breadth of his vision was matched only by the depth of his pockets. During the opening decades of the twentieth century he acquired a collection so large that later generations of staff took to describing its contents by the ton. But Welcome's museum was never finished, and his collection was still stored in vast warehouses when he died, unseen and incomplete. Today, after decades of work by his successors, artefacts from the collection can be seen in museums and libraries throughout the world. Demonstrating what can happen when a collector's aspirations are left unconstrained by wealth, Frances Larson explores Welcome's life through his possessions, revealing the many tensions in his character: between his talents as a businessman and his desire for scholarly recognition; his curiosity and his perfectionism; and his philanthropic aspirations and his drive for personal glory.
Title: An Infinity of Things
Description:
Abstract
An Infinity of Things tells the story of one of the largest private collections ever created, and the life of the man behind it.
Welcome planned a great museum filled with treasures from all corners of the globe, charting the history of human health from prehistory to the present day.
The breadth of his vision was matched only by the depth of his pockets.
During the opening decades of the twentieth century he acquired a collection so large that later generations of staff took to describing its contents by the ton.
But Welcome's museum was never finished, and his collection was still stored in vast warehouses when he died, unseen and incomplete.
Today, after decades of work by his successors, artefacts from the collection can be seen in museums and libraries throughout the world.
Demonstrating what can happen when a collector's aspirations are left unconstrained by wealth, Frances Larson explores Welcome's life through his possessions, revealing the many tensions in his character: between his talents as a businessman and his desire for scholarly recognition; his curiosity and his perfectionism; and his philanthropic aspirations and his drive for personal glory.
Related Results
Syntactic Details
Syntactic Details
In Chapter 2 the author proposed that by ‘grey’ in ‘The patch looks grey to you’ we mean two things—the property of being grey, and a certain way of looking (which are distinct thi...
The Dehn-Nielsen-Baer Theorem
The Dehn-Nielsen-Baer Theorem
This chapter deals with the Dehn–Nielsen–Baer theorem, one of the most beautiful connections between topology and algebra in the mapping class group. It begins by defining the obje...
Conclusion
Conclusion
The foregoing chapters trace a profound literary response to a redistribution of the perceptible, a socio-cultural turning away from the tangible experience of existence to forms o...
Encountering Material Culture Through Archaeological Fiction
Encountering Material Culture Through Archaeological Fiction
Investigating the representation of artefacts, objects and ‘things’ in a range of predominantly Western archaeological fiction from the late Victorian period to the modern day, thi...
Epistemological Self-Profile
Epistemological Self-Profile
This chapter considers the problem of trying to explain how knowledge of the world is possible in general, not simply how human beings come to know certain things about it on the b...
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Though more studies have been dedicated to the place of Kant in Agamben’s oeuvre, Hegel – that other major Enlightenment philosopher indispensable to modernity – holds an equally f...

