Philology The forgotten origins of the modern humanities

James Turner, 1946-

Book - 2014

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Subjects
Published
Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press c2014.
©2014
Language
English
Main Author
James Turner, 1946- (author)
Physical Description
xxiv, 550 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780691145648
  • Prologue
  • Conventions
  • Acknowledgments
  • Part I. From The First Philologists To 1800
  • 1. "Cloistered Bookworms, Quarreling Endlessly in the Muses' Bird-Cage": From Greek Antiquity to circa 1400
  • 2. "A Complete Mastery of Antiquity": Renaissance, Reformation, and Beyond
  • 3. "A Voracious and Undistinguishing Appetite": British Philology to the Mid-Eighteenth Century
  • 4. "Deep Erudition Ingeniously Applied": Revolutions of the Later Eighteenth Century
  • Part II. On The Brink Of The Modern Humanities, 1800 To The Mid-Nineteenth Century
  • 5. "The Similarity of Structure Which Pervades All Languages": From Philology to Linguistics, 1800-1850
  • 6. "Genuinely National Poetry and Prose": Literary Philology and Literary Studies, 1800-1860
  • 7. "An Epoch in Historical Science": The Civilized Past, 1800-1850
  • I. Altertumswissenschaft and Classical Studies
  • II. Archaeology
  • III. History
  • 8. "Grammatical and Exegetical Tact": Biblical Philology and Its Others, 1800-1860
  • Part III. The Modern Humanities In The Modern University, The Mid-Nineteenth To The Twentieth Century
  • 9. "This Newly Opened Mine of Scientific Inquiry": Between History and Nature: Linguistics after 1850
  • 10. "Painstaking Research Quite Equal to Mathematical Physics": Literature, 1860-1920
  • 11. "No Tendency toward Dilettantism": The Civilized Past after 1850
  • I. 'Classics' Becomes a Discipline
  • II. History
  • III. Art History
  • 12. "The Field Naturalists of Human Nature": Anthropology Congeals into a Discipline, 1840-1910
  • 13. "The Highest and Most Engaging of the Manifestations of Human Nature": Biblical Philology and the Rise of Religious Studies after 1860
  • I. The Fate of Biblical Philology
  • II. The Rise of Comparative Religious Studies
  • Epilogue
  • Notes
  • Works Cited
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Turner (humanities, Notre Dame) traces the origin of the modern academic disciplines of the humanities to ancient philology, the study of texts and languages. After a brief history of the study of philology, the author concentrates on the 19th century, during which academic disciplines were largely formed and new ones created, such as anthropology and comparative religious studies. Turner explains the philological basis of such disciplines as art history and archaeology as the analysis of physical objects as texts. Curiously, he excludes philosophy, usually regarded as a charter member of the humanities. An interesting aspect of this work is the importance of biblical studies, which began by establishing (insofar as possible) the original text in the original languages and proceeded to broader questions, such as historical accuracy. Another interesting theme is the leadership of German scholars in the most advanced academic thinking, a movement that was tragically to end with the Nazi suppression of intellectual life. The book is a blizzard of names. Although Turner tries to insert some arresting fact about each scholar he mentions, in the end, one cannot help but be overwhelmed. --Evelyn Edson, Piedmont Virginia Community College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this weighty, scholarly tome, Turner (Religion Enters the Academy), Cavanaugh Professor of humanities at Notre Dame, attempts to cover the concept of philology, "the multifaceted study of texts, languages, and the phenomenon of language itself." He expresses a rather peculiar affinity for the maligned and forgotten progenitor of the humanities, claiming it to be "put down, kicked around, abused, and snickered at" by modern academics, personifying it as "totter[ing] along with arthritic creakiness... its gaunt torso clad in a frock coat." But, he says, "it used to be chic, dashing, and much ampler in girth." That characterization aside, he traces philology's origins and history, from Greek rhetoric to the Renaissance, on through the dawn of the modern humanities in the 19th-century and finally into its 20th-century decline. The story he tells is of a wide-ranging, all-encompassing field of learning that was forced to grow, evolve, and eventually spawn its successors over the centuries. "Philology began a prolonged process of fragmentation and re-formation. Tasks long seen as facets of a single enterprise hived off as semiautonomous areas of scholarship." Turner's examination is thorough, occasionally wry, passionate, and yet painfully dense, suited more for a doctoral program than casual reader; the sort of work that may be heralded as a masterpiece in the field, as overlooked and ill-appreciated as its subject. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Turner (Cavanaugh Professor of Humanities, Univ. of Notre Dame) has written an extensive work on the forgotten subject of philology. He explains that while philology has "fallen on hard times" it is the discipline in which many of the humanities and certain social sciences had their origins. While, according to Turner, the subject has become largely forgotten today because many view it as just the study of old texts. He illustrates that it has a much broader application and includes the study of the history, evolution, and structures of not only texts but also languages. In the author's examples throughout history, he shows how philology's methods of scholarship reached many different areas, from history to biblical research to literature studies. Turner's work is very thorough and yet easy to read. VERDICT Scholars and students will find this a rewarding volume. Turner does a fantastic job of introducing how the history of philology is also, in turn, a chronicle of the various branches of the humanities and why looking at this connection might help demonstrate the humanities' worth among academic disciplines.-Scott Duimstra, Capital Area Dist. Lib., Lansing, MI (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.