James McGrigor Allan
British anthropologist
Intro | British anthropologist | |
Places | United Kingdom Great Britain | |
was | Writer Anthropologist | |
Work field | Literature Social science | |
Gender |
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Birth | 1827 | |
Death | 1916 (aged 89 years) |
James McGrigor Allan (1827, Bristol - 1916, Epsom) was a British anthropologist and writer.
McGrigor was the son of Dr. Colin Allan, at one time chief medical officer of Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Jane Gibbon. He opposed women's right to vote and argued that universal suffrage would cause the disruption of domestic ties, the desecration of marriage and the dissolution of the family. He attributed the agitation for equal rights to the problem of the "superfluous women" on account of emigration and the growing objection of middle and upper-class men to marriage.
He was member of the Anthropological Society of London. His younger brother was the poet Peter John Allan.
Fiction
Non-fiction
Selected articles
Miscellany