Publication

1995 - Clarendon Press, Oxford, England

Language

English

Word Count

89,000 words, Guess

Page Count

356 pages

Identifiers

  • Open LibraryOL1102234M
  • ISBN-100198205198
  • OCLC Control Number30700327
  • Library of Congress Control Number94027170
  • LibraryThing7965396
and 1 more
  • Goodreads6375826

Classifications

  • DDC320/.0943/09033
  • LCCDD193.5 .O96 1995

Description

This is a study of the transmission of political ideas across languages and cultures. It focuses on a notably fruitful encounter between two eighteenth-century political cultures: the reception of Scottish civic ideas, voiced most powerfully in the works of the Edinburgh historian-philosopher Adam Ferguson, by German thinkers in the era of Enlightenment, and early Romanticism. Fania Oz-Salzberger's detailed and challenging analysis places Ferguson in the context of the Scottish Enlightenment, and highlights the affinities and differences between his milieu and that of his German readers. She traces the German reception of Ferguson's thought, pointing at conceptual stumbling-blocks and linguistic tensions. Dr Oz-Salzberger describes a complex, often unintended shift of Scottish civic language into a German vocabulary of spiritual perfection and inner life. This process, she argues, was far from futile: the reading and misreading of Ferguson and other Scottish authors enriched German intellectual life in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Oxford historical monographs

Other Editions

  • Translating the Enlightenment: Scottish civic discourse in eighteenth-century GermanyClarendon Press1995-01-01

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