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This volume plays on the double meaning of network in German and
European Studies: configurations of people, objects, and texts as
well as network analysis, the dominant Digital Humanities (DH)
method featured in the book. Contributions from art history,
history of the book, history, literary studies, and musicology
contemplate the strengths and weakness of treating the period
1789-1810 as either continuous with or a departure from the
centuries before and after by examining different facets of the
longer period 1760-1830. While many chapters investigate German
material, nearly all expand into other European cultures and cover
important regions, protagonists, objects and constellations of
bi-and multilingual life. They intersect Italian, French, and
English networks and reach across the Atlantic into New England.
The period’s bookends indicate a threshold or terminus for
traditions, institutions, and national identities in Europe:
marking the French Revolution (and its effects across the continent
culminating on the Wars again Napoleon) and at times reactionary
responses with delineation of national, regional, or group
identities, respectively, and perhaps most pronounced in the
aftermath of the Congress of Vienna (1814-15). Overall, the
collection of eleven chapters, introduction, and an epilogue
explores European cultural histories at the turn of the nineteenth
century in a nonlinear manner, that is, by accumulating critical
perspectives on people, objects, and texts that test the boundaries
of narratives of transmission, organization, and cohesion that
often mark scholarly evaluations of this period in European
history.
Galileo (1564-1642) incorporated throughout his work the language
of battle, the rhetoric of the epic, and the structure of romance
as a means to elicit emotional responses from his readers against
his opponents. By turning to the literary as a field for creating
knowledge, Galileo delineated a textual space for establishing and
validating the identity of the new, idealized philosopher.
Galileo's Reading places Galileo in the complete intellectual and
academic world in which he operated, bringing together, for
example, debates over the nature of floating bodies and Ludovico
Ariosto's Orlando furioso, disputes on comets and the literary
criticism of Don Quixote, mathematical demonstrations of material
strength and Dante's voyage through the afterlife, and the
parallels of his feisty note-taking practices with popular comedy
of the period.
Galileo (1564 1642) incorporated throughout his work the language
of battle, the rhetoric of the epic, and the structure of romance
as a means to elicit emotional responses from his readers against
his opponents. By turning to the literary as a field for creating
knowledge, Galileo delineated a textual space for establishing and
validating the identity of the new, idealized philosopher.
Galileo's Reading places Galileo in the complete intellectual and
academic world in which he operated, bringing together, for
example, debates over the nature of floating bodies and Ludovico
Ariosto's Orlando furioso, disputes on comets and the literary
criticism of Don Quixote, mathematical demonstrations of material
strength and Dante's voyage through the afterlife, and the
parallels of his feisty note-taking practices with popular comedy
of the period."
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