Chapter
Open Access
List of Figures
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 7
- Introduction 13
-
I The Humanities and the Sciences
- 1.1. Objectivity and Impartiality 27
- 1.2. The Natural Sciences and the Humanities in the Seventeenth Century 43
- 1.3. The Interaction between Sciences and Humanities in Nineteenth-Century Scientific Materialism 53
- 1.4. The Best Story of the World 65
-
II The Science of Language
- 2.1. The Wolf in Itself 81
- 2.2. Soviet Orientalism and Subaltern Linguistics 97
- 2.3. Root and Recursive Patterns in the Czuczor- Fogarasi Dictionary of the Hungarian Language1 113
-
III Writing History
- 3.1. A Domestic Culture 129
- 3.2. History Made More Scholarly and Also More Popular 145
- 3.3. The Professionalization of the Historical Discipline 157
- 3.4. Manuals on Historical Method 171
- 3.5. The Peculiar Maturation of the History of Science 183
-
IV Classical Studies and Philology
- 4.1. Quellenforschung 207
- 4.2. History of Religions in the Making 219
- 4.3. ‘Big Science’ in Classics in the Nineteenth Century and the Academicization of Antiquity 233
- 4.4. New Philology and Ancient Editors 251
- 4.5. What Books Are Made of 265
-
V Literary and Theater Studies
- 5.1. Furio Jesi and the Culture of the Right 283
- 5.2 Scientification and Popularization in the Historiography of World Literature, 1850-1950 299
- 5.3. Theater Studies from the Early Twentieth Century to Contemporary Debates 313
-
VI Art History and Archeology
- 6.1. Embracing World Art 329
- 6.2 .Generic Classification and Habitual Subject Matter 345
- 6.3. The Recognition of Cave Art in the Iberian Peninsula and the Making of Prehistoric Archeology, 1878-1929 359
-
VII Musicology and Aesthetics
- 7.1. Between Sciences and Humanities 379
- 7.2. Melting Musics, Fusing Sounds 391
- 7.3. The History of Musical Iconography and the Influence of Art History 403
-
VIII East and West
- 8.1. The Making of Oriental Studies 415
- 8.2. The Emergence of East Asian Art History in the 1920s 431
- 8.3. Cross-Cultural Epistemology 449
-
IX Information Science and Digital Humanities
- 9.1. Historical Roots of Information Sciences and the Making of E-Humanities 465
- 9.2. Toward a Humanities of the Digital? 479
- 9.3. A Database, Nationalist Scholarship, and Materialist Epistemology in Netherlandish Philology 495
- 9.4. Clio’s Talkative Daughter Goes Digital 511
- 9.5. The Humanities’ New Methods 527
-
X Philosophy and the Humanities
- 10.1. Making the Humanities Scientific 543
- 10.2. The Weimar Origins of Political Theory 555
-
XI The Humanities and the Social Sciences
- 11.1. Explaining Verstehen 569
- 11.2. Discovering Sexuality 583
- 11.3. The Role of Technomorphic and Sociomorphic Imagery in the Long Struggle for a Humanistic Sociology 597
- 11.4. Sociology and the Proliferation of Knowledge 609
- 11.5. Inhumanity in the Humanities 627
-
XII The Humanities in Society
- 12.1. The Making and Persisting of Modern German Humanities 641
- 12.2. Critique and Theory in the History of the Modern Humanities 655
- Epilogue 667
- About the Authors 687
- List of Figures 699
- Index 703
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 7
- Introduction 13
-
I The Humanities and the Sciences
- 1.1. Objectivity and Impartiality 27
- 1.2. The Natural Sciences and the Humanities in the Seventeenth Century 43
- 1.3. The Interaction between Sciences and Humanities in Nineteenth-Century Scientific Materialism 53
- 1.4. The Best Story of the World 65
-
II The Science of Language
- 2.1. The Wolf in Itself 81
- 2.2. Soviet Orientalism and Subaltern Linguistics 97
- 2.3. Root and Recursive Patterns in the Czuczor- Fogarasi Dictionary of the Hungarian Language1 113
-
III Writing History
- 3.1. A Domestic Culture 129
- 3.2. History Made More Scholarly and Also More Popular 145
- 3.3. The Professionalization of the Historical Discipline 157
- 3.4. Manuals on Historical Method 171
- 3.5. The Peculiar Maturation of the History of Science 183
-
IV Classical Studies and Philology
- 4.1. Quellenforschung 207
- 4.2. History of Religions in the Making 219
- 4.3. ‘Big Science’ in Classics in the Nineteenth Century and the Academicization of Antiquity 233
- 4.4. New Philology and Ancient Editors 251
- 4.5. What Books Are Made of 265
-
V Literary and Theater Studies
- 5.1. Furio Jesi and the Culture of the Right 283
- 5.2 Scientification and Popularization in the Historiography of World Literature, 1850-1950 299
- 5.3. Theater Studies from the Early Twentieth Century to Contemporary Debates 313
-
VI Art History and Archeology
- 6.1. Embracing World Art 329
- 6.2 .Generic Classification and Habitual Subject Matter 345
- 6.3. The Recognition of Cave Art in the Iberian Peninsula and the Making of Prehistoric Archeology, 1878-1929 359
-
VII Musicology and Aesthetics
- 7.1. Between Sciences and Humanities 379
- 7.2. Melting Musics, Fusing Sounds 391
- 7.3. The History of Musical Iconography and the Influence of Art History 403
-
VIII East and West
- 8.1. The Making of Oriental Studies 415
- 8.2. The Emergence of East Asian Art History in the 1920s 431
- 8.3. Cross-Cultural Epistemology 449
-
IX Information Science and Digital Humanities
- 9.1. Historical Roots of Information Sciences and the Making of E-Humanities 465
- 9.2. Toward a Humanities of the Digital? 479
- 9.3. A Database, Nationalist Scholarship, and Materialist Epistemology in Netherlandish Philology 495
- 9.4. Clio’s Talkative Daughter Goes Digital 511
- 9.5. The Humanities’ New Methods 527
-
X Philosophy and the Humanities
- 10.1. Making the Humanities Scientific 543
- 10.2. The Weimar Origins of Political Theory 555
-
XI The Humanities and the Social Sciences
- 11.1. Explaining Verstehen 569
- 11.2. Discovering Sexuality 583
- 11.3. The Role of Technomorphic and Sociomorphic Imagery in the Long Struggle for a Humanistic Sociology 597
- 11.4. Sociology and the Proliferation of Knowledge 609
- 11.5. Inhumanity in the Humanities 627
-
XII The Humanities in Society
- 12.1. The Making and Persisting of Modern German Humanities 641
- 12.2. Critique and Theory in the History of the Modern Humanities 655
- Epilogue 667
- About the Authors 687
- List of Figures 699
- Index 703