The Victorian writer Mary Everest Boole (1832-1916) developed an idiosyncratic pedagogical treatment of arithmetic, algebra, and logic. Her pedagogy favored active, child-directed learning, and is now generally admired as ahead of its time, though it must be deciphered through fairly eccentric delivery. A recurring theme in Mrs. Boole's prolific writing is the misunderstood legacy of her late husband, the renowned mathematician and logician George Boole (1815-1864). As existing literature has shown, she worked to promote a morally and religiously charged understanding of his work. More fundamentally, she presented an all-encompassing pedagogical perspective on Mr. Boole's life and work. Across her voluminous publications, Mrs. Boole filtered everything-mathematics, logic, religion, morality, and homelife-through the lens of pedagogy. She used this expansive conception of teaching to span the gulf between professional and domestic work, thereby claiming a privileged domestic perspective on her husband's intellectual output and enlisting his legacy as a resource for her own writing. The Booles' entangled careers show how particular ways of practicing domesticity could shape and be shaped by mathematical identities and ideas.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.endeavour.2023.100900 | DOI Listing |
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