HistoricismRoutledge, 01.03.2004 - 240 Seiten Historicism is the essential introduction to the field, providing its readers with the necessary knowledge, background and vocabulary to apply it in their own studies. Paul Hamilton's compact and comprehensive guide: * explains the theory and basics of historicism |
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Seite vii
... questions of terminology. This involves, among other things, the boundaries which distinguish the literary from the non-literary; the position of literature within the larger sphere of culture; the relationship between literatures of ...
... questions of terminology. This involves, among other things, the boundaries which distinguish the literary from the non-literary; the position of literature within the larger sphere of culture; the relationship between literatures of ...
Seite 1
... questions. Thucydides was induced to undertake his history because he regarded the Peloponnesian War as the greatest war of all times. Augustine wrote his City of God under the impact of Alaric's conquest of Rome. Machiavelli's ...
... questions. Thucydides was induced to undertake his history because he regarded the Peloponnesian War as the greatest war of all times. Augustine wrote his City of God under the impact of Alaric's conquest of Rome. Machiavelli's ...
Seite 3
... question of relativism comes into focus. Is hermeneutics a circular process? Do critical interpreters always find what they want to find? Or, are historicists, by contrast, so effectively aware of this problem that they can break out of ...
... question of relativism comes into focus. Is hermeneutics a circular process? Do critical interpreters always find what they want to find? Or, are historicists, by contrast, so effectively aware of this problem that they can break out of ...
Seite 7
... question records a host of improbabilities, however possible, faithfulness to what happened or could have happened will produce a discourse without point and purpose, philosophically negligible, random in its accuracy and literal in its ...
... question records a host of improbabilities, however possible, faithfulness to what happened or could have happened will produce a discourse without point and purpose, philosophically negligible, random in its accuracy and literal in its ...
Seite 9
... of various societies' (Hartog 1988: 378). This coincidence raises the question of how to historicize the historians Herodotus and Thucydides. We see our reflections in the 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 HIsTORY AnD HIsTORICIsm 9.
... of various societies' (Hartog 1988: 378). This coincidence raises the question of how to historicize the historians Herodotus and Thucydides. We see our reflections in the 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 HIsTORY AnD HIsTORICIsm 9.
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aesthetic already appears argues authority become believes calls character claims colonialism communication conclusion contemporary continuity critical critique cultural defined describes desire dialectic Dilthey discourse effect Enlightenment equally example existence experience explanation expression fact feminist Foucault Freud future Gadamer Gadamer’s give Greenblatt hermeneutics historians historicist human idea ideology implies individual interests interpretation kind knowledge language linguistic literary literature logic look Marx meaning method nature Nietzsche object once original particular past philosophical play political possible postcolonial postmodern practice present produce progress psychoanalysis question rational readers reading reason reflect relation religious remains Renaissance represented rhetorical Romantic rule Schleiermacher Schleiermacher’s scientific seems seen sense social society story success tell texts theory things thinks thought tradition truth turn understanding understood universal writing