Multiple Antiquities - Multiple Modernities

Ancient Histories in Nineteenth Century European Cultures

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Gábor Klaniczay (Hg.), Otto Gécser (Hg.), Michael Werner (Hg.), Multiple Antiquities - Multiple Modernities (2011), Campus Frankfurt / New York, 60486 Frankfurt/Main, ISBN: 9783593408583

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Beschreibung / Abstract

Im 19. Jahrhundert war die Antike eine wichtige Bezugsgröße in vielen europäischen Ländern. Dabei gab es Unterschiede in der Sicht und Aneignung der griechischen, römischen und auch "archaischen" Antike. Im Sinne einer Histoire croisée zeigt der Band, wie jede Nation ihre eigene Antike schuf.

Beschreibung

Gábor Klaniczay ist Professor für mittelalterliche Geschichte an der Central European University in Budapest. Michael Werner ist Professor für Europäische Kulturgeschichte an der L'ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales (EHESS) in Paris.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  • BEGINN
  • Content
  • Introduction
  • The General Framework
  • Philhellenism, Cosmopolitanism, Nationalism
  • We and the Greeks
  • Historiography and Philology
  • Classical Philology and the Making of Modernity in Germany
  • Philology in Germany: Textual or Cultural Scholarship?
  • Classical Scholarship in Nineteenth-Century Hungary
  • Reshaping the “Classical Tradition† to Question the European Political Order
  • From Historia Magistra Vitae to History as Empirical Experimentation of Progress
  • National Antiquities in East-Central Europe
  • The Myth of Scythian Origin and the Cult of Attila in the Nineteenth Century
  • Differentiation in Entanglement
  • Relocating Ithaca
  • Archeology and Historiography
  • The “Antiquitates† of the Greco-Roman World and Their Effect on Antiquarian Thought in Europe from the Renaissance to the Early Nineteenth Century*
  • Contested Origins
  • From Ruins to Heritage
  • A Periphery on the Periphery of the Ancient World
  • Disciplinary Identity and Autonomy at the Beginnings of Archaeology in Romania
  • Entangled Histories in South-East Europe
  • Entangled Objects, Entangled Scales
  • Quest for Homer(s) between Philology, Poetry, and Ethnography
  • Illyrian Heroes, Roman Emperors and Christian Martyrs
  • The Orient†™s Obtuse Antiquity
  • From Republican to Imperial
  • Cultural Appropriation and Social Diffusion of Antiquity
  • Goethe and Homer
  • Karl Ottfried Müller and the “Patriotic† Study of Religion
  • Ex Ossibus Ultor
  • The Myth of Sparta in Juliusz SŠ‚owacki and Cyprian Norwid†™s Dramas
  • Classical Philology in Hungary in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century and the Reception of Classical Greek Theater
  • Classical Rhetoric between Public Education and the Education of the Public in Nineteenth-Century Hungary
  • Constributors

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