ABSTRACT

Bringing together an international group of literary scholars, intellectual historians, and cultural historians, this book discusses history in its various forms, either as texts or images in the early modern period (1500–1800).

Early Modern Genres of History explores different genres and representational modes regarded as history before history became a scientific discipline during the nineteenth century. It does not seek to show how the modern discipline of history as an academic study developed, but rather to examine the ways in which historical texts and images became part of a wider field of early modern knowledge formations. This volume demonstrates how history was connected to the developments in the public sphere, how antiquarian historians used genres in their work, how history evolved and functioned in the visual field, and how historical genres travelled across different contexts. Overall, Early Modern Genres of History reveals how the diversity of historical representations in the early modern period has contributed to the broader foundations of history as it is understood in the twenty-first century.

This volume is of great use to upper-level undergraduates, postgraduates, and scholars interested in early modern Europe and the history of knowledge across both the history and literature disciplines.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons (CC-BY) 4.0 license.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Early modern genres of history
Size: 0.11 MB

part 1|67 pages

Antiquarian and material negotiations

Size: 0.14 MB

chapter 2|24 pages

“Compiled from original authors”

On the status of compilers and compilation as historiographical practice in the eighteenth century
Size: 0.22 MB

chapter 3|24 pages

“History from Marble”

Church notes and the rise of epigraphy in early modern England
Size: 1.06 MB

part 2|52 pages

Visual understandings of history

Size: 5.30 MB

chapter 5|24 pages

Constructing a moment in history

The tableau as a communicational mode and genre in the late 18th century
Size: 2.89 MB

part 3|70 pages

Genres of history and the public sphere

chapter 6|21 pages

Royal historiographer without the title

Niels Ditlev Riegels (1755–1802) and the role of historical genres in the late 18th-century public sphere
Size: 1.70 MB

chapter 7|24 pages

From amusement to study?

Historical genres in the 18th-century essay periodical press
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chapter 8|23 pages

Court intrigues between public and secret history

Some 18th-century Danish solutions
Size: 0.21 MB

part 4|104 pages

Traveling historical genres

chapter 9|25 pages

Historical transfers

Ludwig Albrecht Gebhardi and the transformations of his late eighteenth-century histories of Denmark and Norway
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chapter 10|24 pages

“For no other cause than the lack of writers”

Travel knowledge and the preservation of memory
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chapter 11|21 pages

Histories from Barbary

Empirical and imperial aspirations in an eighteenth-century history
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chapter 12|32 pages

Between Vico and the Virgin

Images and genres of history in Lorenzo Boturini's Idea de una nueva historia general de América septentrional
Size: 2.59 MB

part 5|25 pages

Afterword

chapter |23 pages

Afterword

Some reflections on genre in early modern histories
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