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John Wright's Alma Mater was the first book-length student memoir to be published in Britain. Yet this trailblazing and revealing work has never been reprinted since its appearance in 1827. Full of fascinating detail about college life, it discusses teaching, examinations and student socialising, including sport, hunting and recourse to prostitutes. A remarkable story of success and failure, it often resembles a picaresque novel: after an eventful undergraduate career, Wright became a hack writer and tutor in London. His marriage failed, his wife left him, his children went to the workhouse, and ultimately he was transported for theft to Tasmania, where he died a premature death.This autobiographical memoir has often been referred to or quoted by studies of Cambridge University and the history of mathematics, but the life of its author has never been satisfactorily explored. This new edition makes an important source and a vivid historical document available for the first time. It includes an in-depth exploration of university and college archives, while Wright’s life is also investigated through outside sources, such as the records of the Royal Literary Fund and those of court, prison and transportation authorities.Wright's account, along with the commentary and notes presented here, offers extraordinary reading for anyone interested in the history of the University of Cambridge, the teaching of mathematics in the nineteenth century and the life of Grub Street, the London literary underworld in the 1820s and 1830s. The more general reader will also be surprised and entertained by this topsy-turvy tale recounted with candour and verve.
Christopher Stray is a Cambridge Classics graduate. He taught in schools before undertaking research on the history of education, and has held visiting positions at the universities of Cambridge, Yale and Princeton. He has published widely on schools and universities, examinations and institutional slang.
List of Figures Editorial Preface Editorial IntroductionALMA MATER; OR, SEVEN YEARS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE Preface Introduction 1 First year 2 Chapel scenes 3 A tour of Trinity 4 A tour of Cambridge 5 Lectures 6 Christmas vacation 1814–15 7 Lent term 1815 8 Easter vacation 1815 9 Easter term 1815 105 10 Michaelmas term 1815: the second year 11 Christmas 1815 and Lent Term 1816 12 Easter vacation 1816 13 Long vacation 1816; fellowship examination, September 1816 14 Michaelmas term 1816 15 Christmas vacation 1816–17 16 Lent term 1817 17 Easter term 1817 18 Long vacation 1817 19 Michaelmas term 1818, Lent term 1819 20 After the Tripos 21 Return to Trinity, March 1820 22 Advice to parents 23 The autobiography resumed [1820?] 24 A visit to London 25 Back to Cambridge 26 Debtors’ prison 27 Grub StreetIndex
K. J. Dover, Stephen Halliwell, Christopher Stray, UK) Dover, Sir K. J. (late of University of St Andrews, UK) Halliwell, Stephen (University of St Andrews, UK) Stray, Dr. Christopher (Honorary Research Fellow, Swansea University, K J Dover
Lorna Hardwick, Stephen Harrison, Ruth Hazel, Leanne Hunnings, Sheila Murnaghan, Deborah Roberts, Chris Stray, Elizabeth Vandiver, Amanda Wrigley, Christopher Stray, Chris Stray
Christopher Stray, Michael Clarke, Joshua T. Katz, Swansea University) Stray, Christopher (Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Classics, Ancient History, and Egyptology, Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Classics, Ancient History, and Egyptology, Galway) Clarke, Michael (Professor of Classics, Professor of Classics, National University of Ireland, Princeton University) Katz, Joshua T. (Cotsen Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics, Cotsen Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics