Europa sieht sich mit fremden Blick


Book Description

Europäische Schriftsteller lassen fiktive aussereuropäische Reisende Briefe über ihre Beobachtungen in Europa schreiben: aus dieser verfremdenden Perspektive wurden im 18. Jh. zahlreiche Werke verfasst. Diese fast völlig vergessene europäische Tradition, zu der auch eine Reihe von deutschen Texten gehört, wird in Textcharakteristiken erschlossen. Die Untersuchung geht von der Frage aus, welche geschichtlichen Inhalte sich im besonderen fiktionalen Charakter der Texte erkennen lassen.







Iceland Imagined


Book Description

Iceland, Greenland, Northern Norway, and the Faroe Islands lie on the edges of Western Europe, in an area long portrayed by travelers as remote and exotic - its nature harsh, its people reclusive. Since the middle of the eighteenth century, however, this marginalized region has gradually become part of modern Europe, a transformation that is narrated in Karen Oslund’s Iceland Imagined. This cultural and environmental history sweeps across the dramatic North Atlantic landscape, exploring its unusual geography, saga narratives, language, culture, and politics, and analyzing its emergence as a distinctive and symbolic part of Europe. The earliest visions of a wild frontier, filled with dangerous and unpredictable inhabitants, eventually gave way to images of beautiful, well-managed lands, inhabited by simple but virtuous people living close to nature. This transformation was accomplished by state-sponsored natural histories of Iceland which explained that the monsters described in medieval and Renaissance travel accounts did not really exist, and by artists who painted the Icelandic landscapes to reflect their fertile and regulated qualities. Literary scholars and linguists who came to Iceland and Greenland in the nineteenth century related the stories and the languages of the “wild North” to those of their home countries.




Citizenship and National Identity in Twentieth-Century Germany


Book Description

This book is one of the first to use citizenship as a lens through which to understand German history in the twentieth century. By considering how Germans defined themselves and others, the book explores how nationality and citizenship rights were constructed, and how Germans defined—and contested—their national community over the century. The volume presents new research informed by cultural, political, legal, and institutional history to obtain a fresh understanding of German history in a century marked by traumatic historical ruptures. By investigating a concept that has been widely discussed in the social sciences, Citizenship and National Identity in Twentieth-Century Germany engages with scholarly debates in sociology, anthropology, and political science.




Exploring the Interior


Book Description

In this fascinating collection of essays Harvard Emeritus Professor Karl S. Guthke examines the ways in which, for European scholars and writers of the eighteenth and early nineteenth century, world-wide geographical exploration led to an exploration of the self. Guthke explains how in the age of Enlightenment and beyond intellectual developments were fuelled by excitement about what Ulrich Im Hof called "the grand opening-up of the wide world”, especially of the interior of the non-European continents. This outward turn was complemented by a fascination with "the world within” as anthropology and ethnology focused on the humanity of the indigenous populations of far-away lands – an interest in human nature that suggested a way for Europeans to understand themselves, encapsulated in Gauguin’s Tahitian rumination "What are we?” The essays in the first half of the book discuss first- or second-hand, physical or mental encounters with the exotic lands and populations beyond the supposed cradle of civilisation. The works of literature and documents of cultural life featured in these essays bear testimony to the crossing not only of geographical, ethnological, and cultural borders but also of borders of a variety of intellectual activities and interests. The second section examines the growing interest in astronomy and the engagement with imagined worlds in the universe, again with a view to understanding homo sapiens, as compared now to the extra-terrestrials that were confidently assumed to exist. The final group of essays focuses on the exploration of the landscape of what was called "the universe within”; featuring, among a variety of other texts, Schiller’s plays The Maid of Orleans and William Tell, these essays observe and analyse what Erich Heller termed "The Artist’s Journey into the Interior.” This collection, which travels from the interior of continents to the interior of the mind, is itself a set of explorations that revel in the discovery of what was half-hidden in language. Written by a scholar of international repute, it is eye-opening reading for all those with an interest in the literary and cultural history of (and since) the Enlightenment.




The Anthropology of the Enlightenment


Book Description

This book argues that the Enlightenment created the intellectual foundations of modern anthropology, and cultivated the anthropological pursuit of cultural perspective.




Monographic Series


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Fremde Texte verstehen


Book Description




Phenomenology and Mind 25


Book Description

PRÉSENTATION Olivier Agard, Sylvain Josset, Matthias Schloßberger, Max Scheler et l’Europe SECTION 1. EUROPE AND HISTORY Zachary Davis, The Aging of a Culture Susan Gottlöber, Europa im Umsturz: Max Schelers Umsturzgedanke im Kontext der Weimarer Republik Evrim Kutlu, Wert-Ausgleich-Bildung: Schelers späte Europa-Idee als eine Bildungsaufgabe SECTION 2. EUROPE: A CULTURAL PROJECT? Patrick Lang, The idea of a European cultural community in Scheler’s political thought Alessio Ruggiero, Solidarity, Exemplariness and Bildung: Max Scheler’s social phenomenology in the debate on Europeanism Roberta Guccinelli, La “révolte des pulsions” : la puissance, la Bildung et le concept schélérien de sublimation Eugene Kelly, Über Schelers Idee einer christlichen Gemeinschaft und ihre Rolle beim Wiederaufbau Europas Sylvain Josset, Die „Logik des Herzens‟ – eine europäische „Logik‟? SECTION 3. CRITICISM OF EUROCENTRISM Gerald Hartung, Europa und die Welt – Schelers Analyse zum kapitalistischen Geist der Moderne Natalie Depraz, La critique schelerienne de l’eurocentrisme. Quelle situation sur la carte phénoménologique de l’Europe ? SECTION 4. A EUROPEAN DIALOGUE Olivier Moser, Rudolf Eucken et l’énigme de l’Europe Roberta De Monticelli, Max Scheler et Altiero Spinelli : une rencontre bienheureuse pour l’Europe ? Thomas Keller, Schelers Phänomenologie der Affektivität und der französische Nonkonformismus (Jankelevitch, Corbin, Aron) Julien Farges, L’Europe, l’esprit et la science : Husserl, Paul Valéry et les paradoxes de l’européanisation FREE CONTRIBUTIONS Oleksiy Stovba, Is law possible during the war? Specificity of the corporeal experience Elia Gonnella, Are Sounds Events? Materiality in Auditory Perception