![]() ![]() It included a list of the organs and columns for the score, from 'small' on the right to 'very large' on the left (see Figure 2). 41 The table that the Fowlers started to use in their phrenology booklets from 1850 onward was the most widely published, and often used or copied by other phrenologists. This table was apparently so difficult to read that it was never repeated. 40 Enos Stevens's chart, published in 1839, included the most elaborate table, with columns listing average scores ('general medioc- rity'), under-average and over-average scores, for men and for women, and several columns with blanks for the score of the client. Interestingly, some of the earliest charts with this format are from the UK, suggesting that it was not the influential Fowlers only who were at the basis of chart design. ![]() 39 From the 1840s onwards, lists with blanks for the scores become more popular (instead of scores in the margins). ![]() At the other extreme, large broadsheets were also published at this time. chart of 1840 is the simplest version I have come across, a slip of paper with only the list of organs and the score. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |