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Barbarism and Religion

Barbarism and Religion
2 Volume Paperback Set

Out of Print

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  • Date Published: April 2001
  • availability: Unavailable - out of print May 2005
  • format: Multiple copy pack
  • isbn: 9780521797610

Out of Print
Multiple copy pack

Unavailable - out of print May 2005
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About the Authors
  • "Barbarism and Religion"--Edward Gibbon's own phrase--is the title of an acclaimed sequence of works by John Pocock designed to situate Gibbon, and his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, in a series of contexts in the history of Europe. This is a major intervention from one of the world's leading historians, challenging the idea of a single "Enlightenment" with Paris at its center: through Gibbon a plurality of enlightenments in fact emerge, of which the English, an ecclesiastical as well as a secular phenomenon, was one.

    • The culmination of a life's work by one of the great historians of our time, writing about the greatest English historian of all time
    • A major reinterpretation of one of the defining cultural moments in European history
    • First-time paperback of a work that has already generated major review coverage (including NYTRB), and won a highly prestigious American prize in cultural history
    Read more

    Awards

    • Winner of the Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History of the American Philosophical Society
    More

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...one admires the breadth of his erudition. Indeed, like Gibbon, [J.G.A. Pocock] is a truly enlightened historian, one who takes ideas seriously and who has no patience for those of our own age who would 'deny the reality of authors and the readability of texts.'" T.H. Breen, New York Times Book Review

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    Product details

    • Date Published: April 2001
    • format: Multiple copy pack
    • isbn: 9780521797610
    • length: 790 pages
    • dimensions: 230 x 152 x 50 mm
    • weight: 1.25kg
    • availability: Unavailable - out of print May 2005
  • Table of Contents

    Volume One: Introduction
    Part I. England and Switzerland, 1737–1763:
    1. Putney, Oxford and the question of English Enlightenment
    2. Lausanne and the Arminian Enlightenment
    3. The re-education of young Gibbon: method, unbelief and the turn towards history
    4. The Hampshire militia and the problems of modernity
    5. Study in the camp: erudition and the search for a narrative
    Part II. The Encounter with Paris and the Defence of Erudition, 1761–1763:
    6. The politics of scholarship in French and English Enlightenment
    7. Erudition and Enlightenment in the Académie des Inscriptions
    8. D'Alembert's Discours Preliminaire: the philosophe perception of history
    9. The Essai sur l'Etude de la Litterature: imagination, irony and history
    10. Paris and the gens de lettres: experience and recollection
    Part III. Lausanne and Rome: The Journey Towards a Subject, 1763–1765:
    11. The return to Lausanne and the pursuit of erudition
    12. The journey to Rome and the transformation of intentions
    Epilogue: Gibbon and the rhythm that was different
    Bibliographies
    Index. Volume II: Introduction
    Prelude: the varieties of early modern historiography: Part I. Constructing The Enlightened Narrative: Section I. Pietro Giannone: Jurist and Libertin in the Central Mediterranean
    1. Civil and ecclesiastical history
    2. Popes and emperors: from the Isaurians to the Hohenstaufen
    3. Angevins, Spaniards and Gallicans: to the brink of enlightenment
    4. Gibbon and Giannone: narrative, philosophy, erudition
    Section II. Voltaire: Neo-Classicst and Philosophe in the Enlightened World-Picture
    1. On the horizons of Europe: the kings of the north
    2. Courtly monarchy as the instrument of Englightenment: the Siecle de Louis XIV
    3. Asia and the dechristianisation of history: the Siecle and the Essai sur les Moeurs
    4. The Christian millennium in Europe: the Essai sur les Moeurs
    5. The recovery of civil government, the rebirth of fanaticism, and the return to the Siecle
    6. Voltaire: the exasperating predecessor
    Part II. The Historical Age and the Historical Nation
    Section III. David Hume and the Philosophical History of England
    1. The problems of history in the Hanoverian Kingdoms
    2. David Hume: the Essays as contemporary history
    3. The History of Great Britain: Hume's modern history
    4. England under the House of the Tudor: monarchy, Europe and enthusiasm
    5. Hume's History of England: the Enlightened narrative in retrospect
    Section IV. William Robertson and the History of Europe
    1. The problems of history: the Scottish perspective
    2. Scotland and the progress of society
    3. The Reign of Charles V and the emergence of the European States
    4. Robertson: histories written and unwritten
    Part III. The Progress of Civil Society
    Section V. Adam Smith: Jurisprudence into History
    1. Moral philosophy and the stages of society
    2. Smith's Glasgow lectures: narrative and philosophical history
    Section IV. Adam Ferguson: the Moderate as Machiavellian
    1. Ferguson's Essay: Siberia as the cradle of World history
    2. The Memoires Litteraires and the Remains of Japhet
    3. Scottish narrative: theoretical and civil history
    Part IV. Intending the Decline and Fall
    1. The Enlightened narrative and the project of 1776
    2. 'Gibbon's dark ages:' the writngs of 1765–72
    3. Beginning to write: the evidence of hte autobiographies
    Bibliographies
    Index.

  • Author

    J. G. A. Pocock

    Awards

    • Winner of the Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History of the American Philosophical Society
    • Winner of the Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History of the American Philosophical Society

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