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Becoming Human: Romantic Anthropology and the Embodiment of Freedom
Contributor(s): Wellmon, Chad (Author)
ISBN: 0271037342     ISBN-13: 9780271037349
Publisher: Penn State University Press
OUR PRICE:   $99.94  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 2010
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Movements - Humanism
- Philosophy | Criticism
Dewey: 128
LCCN: 2010024358
Series: Literature & Philosophy (Hardcover)
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6.2" W x 9.2" (1.27 lbs) 336 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Immanuel Kant wrote that his infamously academic, arid philosophy posed three questions: What can I know? What can I do? What can I be permitted to hope for? He then added a fourth that he claimed would subsume them all: What is the human? This last question, he suggested, could be answered by a new science of man called anthropology. In Becoming Human, Chad Wellmon recounts the emergence of anthropology around a question that had become too capacious for a single discipline and too unstable for the distinctions that had come to ground Enlightenment modernity--distinctions between nature and culture, body and mind, human and animal, European and non-European.

If, as Friedrich Schlegel wrote, we don't even know "what the human is," then what would a science of the human base itself on? How would it be possible and why would it even be necessary? This book is an intellectual and literary history of how these questions took form in late eighteenth-century Germany. By examining this period of anthropological discourse through the works of thinkers such as Kant, Novalis, Schleiermacher, Wilhelm von Humboldt, and Goethe, Wellmon argues that the crisis of a late eighteenth-century anthropology marks the emergence of a modernity that sees itself as condemned to draw its norms and very self-understanding from itself. Modernity became fully modern when it became fully reflexive--that is, sensitive to the paradoxical and possibly futile nature of the modern project.


Contributor Bio(s): Wellmon, Chad: - Chad Wellmon is Assistant Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Virginia.