The Latin Language and the Enlightenment

The Latin Language and the Enlightenment

 
Publisher: Voltaire Foundation
Date of Publication:
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9781802077735
ISBN10:1802077731
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:440 pages
Size:234x156 mm
Weight:658 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 8
847
Category:
Long description:
The long eighteenth century is often seen as the age ?when Europe spoke French?. After all, many of the leading figures of the Enlightenment were French and even a good number of authors in other countries chose this language to reach an audience beyond the borders of their homeland. Latin may have served a similar purpose in the Renaissance, but by the eighteenth century its importance quickly declined. This view is simplistic and misleading and this volume seeks to refute it. The essays presented in this book demonstrate Latin continued to play a highly important role during the long eighteenth century, both within Europe and in interactions between the ?West? and the rest of the world. It sheds light on the reasons why Latin remained a key factor in eighteenth-century culture, as well as the contexts in which it was used. In so doing, this volume makes a significant contribution to current debates on the nature of the Enlightenment and its place in global history.
Table of Contents:

List of figures and tables

I. Introduction

FLORIS VERHAART, Introduction: Latin and the Enlightenment

LAURENCE BROCKLISS, The empire of Latin

II. Constructing Identity

FLORIS VERHAART, A Humanist Identity in an Enlightened Age: Neo-Latin Poetry, Canon Building, and the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns in the Dutch Republic

SIMON WIRTHENSOHN, Enlightened tendencies in eighteenth-century school theatre: the dramatic oeuvre of Joseph Resch

ANDREW LAIRD, Creole Latin legacies and the European Enlightenment

STEFAN TILG, Latin public, Latin literature, and Latin nationalism in eighteenth-century Hungary

III. Authority

KATHERINE A. EAST, Locating Latin in the heterodox exchanges of Enlightenment England: Toland and his critics

JOHN T. GILMORE, ?Non interpres, sed poeta?: William Jones and his ?Ode Sinica?

IV. Development of new ideas and knowledge

MALIKA BASTIN-HAMMOU, The uses of Latin in Madame Dacier?s Greek scholarship: a story of emancipation

MATTHEW FOX, Latin Critical Theory in the Early Eighteenth Century

NICHOLAS MITHEN, Vico among the critics: Latin and philology in the gestation of the Scienza Nuova

ALESSANDRO OTTAVIANI, Mapping diseases and dissecting landscapes: Giovan Battista Morgagni?s Latin prose from the Adversaria anatomica ot the Epistolae Aemilianae

V. Diffusion of Ideas

ESTELLE HAAN, Humanism and scientific invention in the Neo-Latin poetry of  Enlightenment England

SCOTT MANDELBROTE, Newton in Latin: An Enlightenment Author and his European Audience

JAN PAPY, Lecture notes from Leuven University 1750-1793: The Scientific Enlightenment in the Eighteenth-Century Classroom?

ELENA DAHLBERG, Jean-Jacques Rousseau in Latin Dissertations from Sweden, ca. 1755?1815

DANIEL WENDT, Ab omni verborum obscoenitate purgata? Latin obscenities, audiences, and humanism in the French Enlightenment

Author biographies

Summaries

Bibliography

Index