Black Tom: Arnold of Rugby: The Myth and the Man
By (Author) Terence Copley
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
4th January 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Independent schools, private education
373.092
Paperback
320
470g
Professor Terence Copleys new biography of Thomas Arnold combines a study of his life with an examination of Arnolds influence as an educator, a theologian and a churchman. Arnold was only a Victorian for five years (he died in 1842) but he has been remembered as a major figure of the age, not least because Lytton Strachey chose him as one of his objects of ridicule and pillory in Eminent Victorians (1918).He stands as a monument to the development of the 19th-century public school system whose influence spread far beyond Britains upper-class. Arnold was the celebrated headmaster of Rugby School and Hughess Tom Browns Schooldays (1857) fixed him in the public imagination.Copley assesses both the uncritical Victorian versions of Arnolds life--including Hughes and Dean Stanleys original Life--and the sneering assessment of his influence, perpetuated by Strachey, to provide the first rounded portrait of Arnold. In conclusion Copley explores the possible legacy that this great but neglected figure has left to our age.
Terence Copley is the Professor of Education in the University of Exeter