04844nam 2200697 450 991080850400332120230228145551.01-78684-427-31-118-50808-41-118-50807-61-118-50809-21-118-50815-7(CKB)3710000000498545(EBL)4529146(SSID)ssj0001686798(PQKBManifestationID)16524914(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001686798(PQKBWorkID)15052039(PQKB)10200223(Au-PeEL)EBL4529146(CaPaEBR)ebr11251454(CaONFJC)MIL847030(PPN)266482147(MiAaPQ)EBC4529146(OCoLC)891400157(EXLCZ)99371000000049854520160916d2016 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrA companion to intellectual history /edited by Richard Whatmore and Brian YoungChichester, West Sussex :Wiley Blackwell,2016.1 online resource (557 p.)Wiley Blackwell companions to world historyIncludes index.1-119-12557-X 1-118-29480-7 Title Page; Table of Contents; Notes on Contributors; Introduction; Part One: Approaches to Intellectual History; Chapter One: The Identity of Intellectual History; Introduction; The practice of intellectual history; 'Read like a critic'; Intellectual history and the history of disciplines; Conclusion; References; Chapter Two: Intellectual History and Historismus in Post-War England; Introduction: The history of political thought and the history of historiography; Friedrich Meinecke and Historismus; Historismus : from historical method to history of historiographyConclusion: Historismus and émigré scholarshipReferences; Further reading; Chapter Three: Intellectual History in the Modern University; Introduction; The Sussex anomaly; John Burrow as an intellectual historian; Burrow and the working intellectual historian; Conclusion; References; Further reading; Chapter Four: Intellectual History and Poststructuralism; Introduction; What is poststructuralism?; Jacques Derrida; Deconstruction and social history; New anxieties; Reaffirming history; References; Chapter Five: Intellectual History as Begriffsgeschichte; IntroductionKoselleck and the origins of GGThe content of GG; Conclusion; References; Chapter Six: Intellectual History and History of the Book; Introduction; Philology and the history of ideas; Roger Chartier and linguistic history; Grafton, Jardine, Waszink and Lipsius; References; Further reading; Chapter Seven: Michel Foucault and the Genealogy of Power and Knowledge; Introduction; Beginnings: From Nietzsche to the birth of archaeology; The archaeology of the human sciences; From archaeology to genealogy; References; Chapter Eight: Quentin Skinner and the Relevance of Intellectual HistoryIntroductionDefining linguistic contextualism; Giving substance to the method; Intellectual history and present politics; References; Chapter Nine: J. G. A. Pocock as an Intellectual Historian; Language and discourse; The rise and fall of paradigms; The nature of history; Situating Pocock; References; Part Two: The Discipline of Intellectual History; Chapter Ten: Intellectual History and the History of Philosophy; Introduction; The history of philosophy; Offshoots from history of philosophy: history of science and history of ideas; Intellectual historyIntellectual history and the history of philosophy: Philosophy in History (1984)The context of the 'Introduction' in the Philosophy in History (1984); The current relationship between intellectual history and history of philosophy; References; Chapter Eleven: Intellectual History and the History of Political Thought; The history of political thought and present politics; Unspoken assumptions; Conditions of possibility; The global turn; References; Chapter Twelve: Intellectual History and the History of Science; The new historical consciousness; Science and history in the nineteenth centuryThe history of science as an academic disciplineWiley Blackwell companions to world history.PhilosophyPhilosophyHistoriographyIntellectual lifePhilosophy.PhilosophyHistoriography.Intellectual life.Whatmore RichardYoung BrianMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910808504003321A companion to intellectual history3975710UNINA