Review from previous edition pioneering study of Victorian childhood
William Baker, Years Work in English Studies
Incorporating a wide range of historical documents and literary texts, and written in a clear, engaging style...a stimulating new perspective on the history of child development, which will appeal to a broad range of readers.
Roisin McCloskey, English
This is one of those books that makes so much sense that one cannot believe it has not been written before
Charlotte Sleigh, British Journal for the History of Science
A monumental piece of scholarship, impeccably researched and full of illuminating detail.
Gregory Tate, MLR, 106.4, 2011
In this fascinating volume a highly complex story is deployed with deceptive ease.
Metapsychology online reviews
This extremely readable, enormously wide-ranging work is a welcome addition to the shelves of literature and science scholarship
Melanie Keene, BSLS
Shuttleworth is masterful... [She] takes on an impressively wide range of topics in child-study and draws fascinating and often unexpected connections between them... In the end, The Mind of the Child prompts us to rethink our own assumptions about the history of childhood by revealing that the complexity of nineteenth-century discussions of child development is as layered and rich as is an actual human mind.
Andrea Kaston Tange, Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies