ABSTRACT

First Published in 2002. A History of Curiosity examines the early methodology of anthropological and social research from a critical­historical perspective. The three principal methods of research, travel, the survey and the collection of significant objects, are studied in the context of the social conditions and intellectual trends of early modern times. The author's grasp of the vast, often obscure, but highly interesting body of literature which emerged in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries commands the attention of a wide readership outside purely academic boundaries. He weaves together a series of separate studies, emphasising links between the figures, the philosophies and the literatures of early modern times; links which have previously only been suspected. In focussing on the ars apodemica, or art of travelling'', a body of formal instructions on how to travel, observe and record the information gathered, the author demonstrates the origins of the characteristic inquisitive and systematizing spirit of the modern West.

chapter |46 pages

On the Archaeology of Social Research

chapter 2|59 pages

Rerum Memoria

Early Modern Surveys and Documentation Centres

chapter 3|16 pages

Imagines Mundi

Allegories of the Continents in the Baroque and the Enlightenment

chapter 4|37 pages

The Man Who Called Himself George Psalmanazar or

The Problem of the Authenticity of Ethnographic Description

chapter 5|23 pages

Josephinism and Social Research

The Patriotic Traveller of Count Leopold Berchtold

chapter 7|28 pages

From the Private to the Sponsored Traveller

Volney's Reform of Travel Instruction and the French Revolution