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Feeling and Classical Philology: Knowing Antiquity in German Scholarship, 1770-1920

Part of the Classics after Antiquity series
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Nineteenth-century German classical philology underpins many structures of the modern humanities.

In this book, Constanze Güthenke shows how a language of love and a longing for closeness with a personified antiquity have lastingly shaped modern professional reading habits, notions of biography, and the self-image of scholars and teachers.

She argues that a discourse of love was instrumental in expressing the challenges of specialisation and individual formation (Bildung), and in particular for the key importance of a Platonic scene of learning and instruction for imagining the modern scholar.

The book is based on detailed readings of programmatic texts from, among others, Wolf, Schleiermacher, Boeckh, Thiersch, Dilthey, Wilamowitz and Nietzsche.

It makes a case for revising established narratives, but also for finding new value in imagining distance and an absence of nostalgic longing for antiquity.

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£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108851088 / 9781108851084
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
26/02/2020
England
English
272 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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