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Although the paradoxical reality of warfare may elude definition,
since antiquity war has been a constitutive element of Western
culture; seen from a historical perspective, it gives access to a
broad array of tensions between various modelsof knowledge and
differentkinds of tradition. The essays in this volume approach the
phenomenon of war from antiquity to Clausewitz from the perspective
of a variety of disciplines. Particular attention is given to
texts, images, and their interaction.
The theme of this volume, 'knowledge in literature', refers not to
the way in which literature communicates cultural phenomena,
events, and norms regulating or reflecting everyday action and
behaviour. Instead, it focuses on the 'new knowledge' about nature
and the human animal produced (or rejected) in individual branches
of science and learning since the 17th century and the changes it
has effected in human and social self-interpretation. The
consequence of this has been a spate of rival concepts of nature
and representation and new forms of literary penetration and
appropriation of knowledge that display repercussions both on
literature itself and on science, philosophy and the humanities.
Translations play a decisive role as the basis and trigger for more
complex transformations a " both in the construction of science and
for literature. In the fine arts and archaeology, it is a question
of enquiring into forms of a ~translationa (TM) which bear
resemblances to the functioning of textual translations although
they are not based on the transmission of text.
Although Antiquity itself has been intensively researched, together
with its reception, to date this has largely happened in a
compartmentalized fashion. This series presents for the first time
an interdisciplinary contextualization of the productive
acquisitions and transformations of the arts and sciences of
Antiquity in the slow process of the European societies
constructing a scientific system and their own cultural identity, a
process which started in the Middle Ages and has continued up to
the Modern Age. The series is a product of work in the
Collaborative Research Centre "Transformations of Antiquity" and
the "August Boeckh Centre of Antiquity" at the Humboldt University
of Berlin. Their individual projects examine transformational
processes on three levels in particular - the constitutive function
of Antiquity in the formation of the European knowledge society,
the role of Antiquity in the genesis of modern cultural identities
and self-constructions, and the forms of reception in art,
literature, translation and media.
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