01143nam0 22003251i 450 RML029831820231121125741.0882042950020121121d1991 ||||0itac50 baitaitz01i xxxe z01nClassi sociali e società contemporaneaa cura di Antonio Schizzerotto4. edMilano FrancoAngeli 1991212 p.22 cmCollana di sociologia 128001RML03295132001 Collana di sociologia 128Classi socialiSec. 20.FIRRMLC416231I305.520Schizzerotto, AntonioRMLV183228ITIT-0120121121IT-FR0017 Biblioteca umanistica Giorgio ApreaFR0017 RML0298318Biblioteca umanistica Giorgio Aprea 52CIS 9/1577 52VM 0000681585 VM barcode:00044413. - Inventario:619VMA 2007041020121204 52Classi sociali e società contemporanea463919UNICAS05186oam 2200733I 450 991079201800332120230803023710.01-135-05469-X1-135-05470-30-203-48973-X10.4324/9780203489734 (CKB)2560000000102589(EBL)1211716(SSID)ssj0000888056(PQKBManifestationID)12384719(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000888056(PQKBWorkID)10846612(PQKB)11174859(MiAaPQ)EBC1211716(Au-PeEL)EBL1211716(CaPaEBR)ebr10719827(CaONFJC)MIL497067(OCoLC)849928768(FINmELB)ELB132872(EXLCZ)99256000000010258920180706d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrRace, science, and the nation reconstructing the ancient past in Britain, France and Germany /Chris ManiasNew York ;London :Routledge,2013.1 online resource (621 p.)Routledge studies in cultural history ;21Routledge studies in cultural history ;21Description based upon print version of record.1-138-95260-5 0-415-83299-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; List of Figures; List of Abbreviations; Acknowledgments; Introduction; The Sciences of the Past; Race, Progress and Nationality; 1. Unveiling the Ancestry of Peoples: Tradition, Language and Ethnology, 1800-1860; The Old Authorities; New Traditions of Nature, Humanity and Society; Reconstructive Philology; The Celtic and Germanic Languages; The Varied Bases of Ethnology; The Rise of the Indo-Europeans; A New Gateway to the Unwritten Past; 2. Unearthing Our Forefathers: The Growth of Provincial Archaeology, 1830-1860The Antiquarian Tradition'Let us go into the Graves:' Archaeological Authority; Collecting with a Definite Purpose; The Eras of the Ancient Past; Models of Culture and Development; 3. The Limits of History: Defining Nations, Races and Peoples, 1820-1850; Gaulish Histories in Post-Revolutionary France; The Developments and Migrations of the Germanen; British Tensions between Ethnic Models; Disentangling Popular Communities; 4. Building the Science of Man: National Anthropology and the Ancient Past, 1850-1870; Building Metropolitan Associations: The Anthropological SocietiesAnthropological MethodsThe Gaulish Races of France; Reconciling the Celt and the Saxon; Surveying the German Types; The Mixed Nation; 5. Locating the Peoples of Prehistory: Geology, Archaeology and Anthropology, 1840-1870; Consolidating the Field; Defining and Dividing Prehistoric Time; The Oldest Human Condition: Interpreting the Stone Age; The Path to Civilization: The Development of Metal; Internationalism and Universalism in Prehistory; 6. The Fracturing of Common Origins: The Nationalization of the Anthropological Past, 1871-1900; National Integration and InstitutionalizationAnthropology and National QuestionsThe Aryans: The Clash of Prehistory and Philology; Questions of Celts and Neolithics in France; The Iberian Ancestry of British Civilization; The Branches of the German Nation; The Common European Races and National Definition; 7. Tension and Diffusion: The Racial and Cultural Sciences, 1890-1914; Anthropometry Undermined; The Rise of Racial Essentialism; The Problematic Science of Folklore; Cultural Migrations and Racial Areas in Archaeology; Fragmentation and Refraction; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; IndexAcross the nineteenth century, scholars in Britain, France and the German lands sought to understand their earliest ancestors: the Germanic and Celtic tribes known from classical antiquity, and the newly discovered peoples of prehistory. New fields - philology, archeology and anthropology - interacted, breaking down languages, unearthing artifacts, measuring skulls and recording the customs of ""savage"" analogues. This was a decidedly national process: disciplines institutionalized on national levels, and their findings seen to have deep implications for the origins of the nation and its "Routledge Studies in Cultural HistoryEthnologyGreat BritainHistoriographyEthnologyFranceHistoriographyEthnologyGermanyHistoriographyGreat BritainHistoryTo 1066HistoriographyFranceHistoryTo 987HistoriographyGermanyHistoryTo 843HistoriographyEthnologyHistoriography.EthnologyHistoriography.EthnologyHistoriography.936Manias Chris.1539012MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910792018003321Race, science, and the nation3789597UNINA