ABSTRACT
This much-awaited second volume investigates the changes in subject, method and institutional context of the humanistic disciplines around 1800, offering a wealth of insights for specialists and students alike. Point of departure is the pivotal question whether there was a paradigm shift in the humanities around 1800 or whether these changes were part of a much longer process. The authors provide an overarching perspective including philology, musicology, art history, linguistics, historiography, philosophy and literary theory. They also make clear that the influence from the East, from the Ottoman Empire to China, was crucial for the development of the European humanistic disciplines.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|50 pages
Linguistics and Philology
chapter |13 pages
The Rise of Philology
chapter |17 pages
Linguistics 'ante litteram'
chapter |16 pages
The Rise of General Linguistics as an Academic Discipline
part II|57 pages
The Humanities and the Sciences
chapter |20 pages
The Mutual Making of Sciences and Humanities
chapter |25 pages
Bopp the Builder
part III|53 pages
Writing History and Intellectual History
chapter |17 pages
Nineteenth-Century Historicism and Its Predecessors
chapter |17 pages
Fact and Fancy in Nineteenth-Century Historiography and Fiction
chapter |15 pages
The Humanities as the Stronghold of Freedom John Milton's Areopagitica and John Stuart Mill's On Liberty
part IV|81 pages
The Impact of the East
chapter |23 pages
The Impact on the European Humanities of Early Reports from Catholic Missionaries from China, Tibet and Japan between 1600 and 1700
chapter |33 pages
The Middle Kingdom in the Low Countries
part V|35 pages
Artworks and Texts
chapter |15 pages
The Role of Emotions in the Development of Artistic Theory and the System of Literary Genres
part VI|53 pages
Literature and Rhetoric
chapter |17 pages
Bourgeois versus Aristocratic Models of Scholarship
part VII|57 pages
Academic Communities
