James McGrigor Allan

British anthropologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBritish anthropologist
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain
wasWriter Anthropologist
Work fieldLiterature Social science
Gender
Male
Birth1827
Death1916 (aged 89 years)
The details

Biography

James McGrigor Allan (1827, Bristol - 1916, Epsom) was a British anthropologist and writer.

Biography

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.

Works

Fiction

  • (1857). Ernest Basil.
  • (1858). Grins and Wrinkles.
  • (1862). The Cost of a Coronet.
  • (1862). The Last Days of a Bachelor: An Autobiography.
  • (1863). Nobly False: A Novel.
  • (1864). Father Stirling.
  • (1887). The Wild Curate.
  • (1888). A Lady's Four Perils: A Novel.
  • (1903). Where Lies her Charm?

Non-fiction

Selected articles

Miscellany

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 28 Jun 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.