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Humankinds

The Renaissance and Its Anthropologies, Pluralisierung & Autorität 25

Erschienen am 19.04.2011, 1. Auflage 2011
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9783110258301
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: VI, 280 S., 9 s/w Illustr., 9 b/w ill.
Einband: gebundenes Buch

Beschreibung

Anthropology is a notoriously polysemous term. Within a continental European academic context, it is usually employed in the sense of philosophical anthropology, and mainly concerned with exploring concepts of a universal human nature. By contrast, Anglo-American scholarship almost exclusively associates anthropology with the investigation of cultural and ethnic differences (cultural anthropology). How these two main traditions (and their derivations such as literary anthropology, historical anthropology, ethnology, ethnography, intercultural studies) relate to each other is a matter of debate. Both, however, have their roots in the path-breaking changes that occurred within sixteenth and early seventeenth-century culture and scientific discourse. It was in fact during this period that the term anthropology first acquired the meanings on which its current usage is based. The Renaissance did not invent the human. But the period that gave rise to humanism witnessed an unprecedented diversification of the concept that was at its very core. The question of what defines the human became increasingly contested as new developments like the emergence of the natural sciences, religious pluralisation, as well as colonial expansion, were undermining old certainties. The proliferation of doctrines of the human in the early modern age bears out the assumption that anthropology is a discipline of crisis, seeking to establish sets of common values and discursive norms in situations when authority finds itself under pressure.

Autorenportrait

Andreas Höfele and Stephan Laqué, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany.

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