Writing the nation and reframing early modern intellectual history in Hungary
pp. 135-154
Résumé
The article traces the development of Hungarian intellectual history of the early modern period from the emergence of the national romantic constructions of literary history to the recent turn towards contextualist and conceptual history. One of its main findings is the ideological importance of this period for the formation of the national canon, as it became a central point of reference for the emerging local methodological tradition of intellectual history, even if it was often compartamentalized under other categories. From this perspective, the article puts particular emphasis on ideological constructions seeking to define the nation and depict the emergence of modern national identity. This finding also offers a vantage point for analyzing the interplay between literary history and the socio-culturally focused approaches, which can be considered the main framework for the developments of the last two decades, when these local historiographical traditions entered into an interesting dialogue with the Western European and American schools of intellectual history. Along these lines, while pointing out the discursive continuities with the previous paradigms, which are shaping even the contemporary historiographical production, the article also ponders the ways in which the inherited (post-)romantic constructions can be successfully challenged.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Demeter Tamás (2010) Trends and traditions of intellectual history writing. Studies in East European Thought 62 (2).
Pages: 135-154
DOI: 10.1007/s11212-010-9116-9
Citation complète:
Trencsényi Balázs, 2010, Writing the nation and reframing early modern intellectual history in Hungary. Studies in East European Thought 62 (2), Trends and traditions of intellectual history writing, 135-154. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11212-010-9116-9.