A critical reading of both literary and non-literary German texts
published between 1490 and 1540 exposes a populist backlash against
perceived social and political disruptions, the dramatic expansion of
spatial and epistemological horizons, and the growth of global trade
networks. These texts opposed the twin phenomena of pluralization and
secularization, which promoted a Humanist tolerance for ambiguity,
boosted globalization and spatial expansion around 1500, and promoted
new ways of imagining the world. Part I considers threats to the
political order and the protestations against them, above all a
vigorous defense of the common good. Part II traces the intellectual
and epistemological upheaval triggered by the spatial discoveries and
the new methods of visual and verbal representation of space. Part III
examines the nationalistic backlash triggered by the rising global
trade and related abusive trading practices and by perceived undue
foreign influences. It is the basic premise of this book that the
texts examined here protested the observed disruptions of the status
quo and sought to reestablish a stable imperial order in the face of
political and social upheaval and of the felt cultural decline of the
German nation.
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Visions of a Nation in Decline
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110675009
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
De Gruyter
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter