"Tells the story of the Solanaceae plant family as revealed in both the scientific and the sentimental discourse of the Victorian era, as advances in medical knowledge, horticulture, evolutionary theory, and crucially, human desire, transformed nightshades' botanical reputation. From the Old World species bittersweet and belladonna, the book moves to the potato and tobacco, the two New World species that effected the greatest change in the family's Victorian reputation, and concludes with an account of the ornamental petunia and the edible pepper, eggplant, and tomato"--
A darkly alluring plant family and the arrival of modernity
Victorian Nightshades tells the story of how one plant familynotorious for centuries in England because of its frequently psychoactive and poisonous propertiesrose to social and economic prevalence during the nineteenth century. Beginning with bittersweet and belladonna, the Old World species associated with evil, witchcraft, and dangerous women in an era when traditional botanical beliefs not only assigned morality to plants but also gendered them, Campbell then moves to the ubiquitous potato and tobacco before concluding with four of the Solanaceae that achieved the widest national favor by the end of the century: the ornamental petunia and the edible pepper, eggplant, and tomato.
The story of the nightshades exposes the conflicts between science and popular sentiment and between knowledge and received opinion that defined the nineteenth century. Campbell compellingly details how advances in medical and botanical knowledge, evolutionary theory, and the vagaries of human desire transformed the Solanaceae from a plant family plagued by fear and hostility in the British imagination to one of cultural favor and celebration by the turn of the centuryencapsulating the Victorian eras course to modernity.