Alexander von Humboldt's Transatlantic Personae

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Alexander von Humboldt
Alexander Von Humboldt's multi-faceted work
Atlantic intellectual history
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Celestino Mutis
Charles III
colonial Latin America studies
colonialism
Cuban Slavery
De Cuba
Del Monte
Du Nouveau Continent
El Faro
El Griego
Enhanced State Intervention
Enlightenment
Enlightenment philosophy
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
European apologist
Examen Critique
Explorer Alexander Von Humboldt
Globalization
Hein's Story
Hein’s Story
Humboldt's Letter
Humboldt's Political Essay
Humboldt's Text
Humboldt's Work
Humboldt's Writing
Humboldtian science influence in Americas
Humboldt’s Letter
Humboldt’s Political Essay
Humboldt’s Text
Humboldt’s Work
Humboldt’s Writing
knowledge circulation transatlantic
La Condamine
La Isla
Latin American History
Latin American independence
Llanos De
National Library
Ottmar Ette
Romanticism in science
Royal Botanical Expedition
scientific exploration history
Slavery
Translation
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138117389
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 22 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Who was Alexander von Humboldt? Was he really a lone genius? Was he another European apologist for colonialism in the Americas or the father of Latin American independence? Was he a roving Romanticist, or did his sensibilities belong to the Enlightenment?

Naturalist, philosopher, historian, and proto-sociologist--to name just some of the fields to which he contributed--, Humboldt is impossible to contain in a single identity or definition. His voluminous writings range across so many different fields of knowledge that his scholarly-scientific personae multiplied even during his lifetime, and they have continued to proliferate since his death in 1859. A household word throughout the nineteenth century, Humboldt was eventually eclipsed by Charles Darwin (whose own travels had been motivated by Humboldt’s) and disappeared from view for much of the twentieth century, notably in the United States. The essays in this collection testify to the renewed interest that Alexander von Humboldt’s multi-faceted work is inspiring in the twenty-first century, especially among cultural and literary historians from both sides of the Atlantic.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Atlantic Studies.

The Martha Rivers Ingram Professor of English and Professor of Comparative Literature at Vanderbilt University, Vera M. Kutzinski has written widely on the literatures of the Americas. She co-edits (with Ottmar Ette) the University of Chicago Press series Alexander von Humboldt in English. Her forthcoming book is titled Modernisms in Motion: Langston Hughes and Translation in the Americas.