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Taylor and Francis

Language & Literature || Literature

Humanism

Author : Tony Davies

Book Series : The New Critical Idiom

Master eBook ISBN10 : 0-203-12972-5

Master eBook ISBN13 : 978-0-203-12972-2

No of pages : 160

eBook Price : £4.00

Originally Published : 7 Nov 1996

Seemingly an appeal to simple, shared humanity, humanism has proved over the last two hundred years one of the most contentious and divisive of concepts. It has provoked a succession of bitter altercations and engages with some of the profoundest themes - religious, sexual, political - of modern life and thought.
Starting with the nineteenth century educationalists and historians, Tony Davies's study traces the emergence of the figure of 'Man' in the writings of the humanists of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries and the free-thinkers and philosophies of the seventeenth and eighteenth. He explores the issues at stake in the bruising encounters between humanism and a succession of intransigent anti-humanisms.
Humanism is an essential guide to one of the key concepts in cultural and literary thought.



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Table of contents : Contents. Introduction. Towards a Definition. 1. The Invention of Humanity Romantic Humanism Humanism in England `Renaissance Man': a 19th-century Creation The Birth of Modernity The Rights of Man The Religion of Humanity 2. From Humanism to Antihumanism Nietzsche: Humanism as Metaphor and Illusion Liberal Humanism, Modernism and Antihumanism The Twilight of Humanism, Socialist Humanism and Theoretical Antihumanism The Death of Man 3. Humanists Before Humanism: the Renaissance Humanist Printing Eloquence and Identity Gender Trouble Humanist Reading Pico and `Renaissance Humanism' 4. Humanism and Enlightenment Nature and Science Humanism and Religion Enlightenment Conclusion. On the Word Postscript. Bibliography. Index.

Quotes

'Davies knows what he is writing about and knows how to write about it.' |I New Humanist

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