The Rise of the Public in Enlightenment EuropeCambridge University Press, 06.09.2001 - 284 Seiten James Melton's lucid and accessible study examines the rise of 'the public' in eighteenth-century Europe. A work of comparative synthesis focusing on England, France, and the German-speaking territories, this is the first book-length, critical reassessment of what the philosopher JÜrgen Habermas called the 'bourgeois public sphere' of the eighteenth century. Topics include the growing importance of public opinion in political life, transformations of the literary public realm, eighteenth-century authorship, theatre publics, and new practices of sociability as they developed in salons, coffeehouses, taverns and Masonic lodges. |
Im Buch
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Seite 3
... debate between Habermas and the German SDS see Habermas , " Die Scheinrevolution und ihre Kinder , " and Oskar Negt , " Einleitung , " in Die Linke Antwortet Its impact outside of the German - speaking world was Introduction 3.
... debate between Habermas and the German SDS see Habermas , " Die Scheinrevolution und ihre Kinder , " and Oskar Negt , " Einleitung , " in Die Linke Antwortet Its impact outside of the German - speaking world was Introduction 3.
Seite 4
... debate , more open and accessible forms of urban public space and sociability , and an explosion of print culture in the form of newspapers , political journalism , novels , and crit- icism . He acknowledged that the presumed openness ...
... debate , more open and accessible forms of urban public space and sociability , and an explosion of print culture in the form of newspapers , political journalism , novels , and crit- icism . He acknowledged that the presumed openness ...
Seite 8
... debate , argues Habermas , the public sphere rested on three assumptions . First , the dictates of reason and not the authority or identity of the speaker ( or writer ) were held to be the sole arbiter in debate . As a realm of ...
... debate , argues Habermas , the public sphere rested on three assumptions . First , the dictates of reason and not the authority or identity of the speaker ( or writer ) were held to be the sole arbiter in debate . As a realm of ...
Seite 9
... debate on public affairs be open and relatively unconstrained by censorship . These norms , argues Habermas , found mature expression in the crit- ical spirit of the late Enlightenment ( here he especially emphasizes the importance of ...
... debate on public affairs be open and relatively unconstrained by censorship . These norms , argues Habermas , found mature expression in the crit- ical spirit of the late Enlightenment ( here he especially emphasizes the importance of ...
Seite 10
... debate whose moral promise transcended its ideological origins . If historians , and especially historians of eighteenth - century Europe , have engaged the insights of Habermas's book with special vigor , this is in large part due to ...
... debate whose moral promise transcended its ideological origins . If historians , and especially historians of eighteenth - century Europe , have engaged the insights of Habermas's book with special vigor , this is in large part due to ...
Inhalt
The peculiarities of the English | 19 |
Politics and the press | 27 |
Radicalism and extraparliamentary politics after 1760 | 33 |
Ambiguities of the political public sphere | 39 |
Opacity and transparency French political culture in the eighteenth century | 45 |
Jansenism and the emergence of an oppositional public sphere | 48 |
The politics of publicity | 55 |
Secrecy and its discontents | 61 |
Vienna | 183 |
Being sociable | 195 |
Women in public enlightenment salons | 197 |
The rise of the salon | 199 |
Women and sociability in Enlightenment thought | 202 |
Salon culture in eighteenthcentury Paris | 205 |
The salon in eighteenthcentury England | 211 |
Salons of Vienna and Berlin | 215 |
Readers writers and spectators | 79 |
Reading publics transformations of the literary public sphere | 81 |
The reading revolution | 86 |
Periodicals novels and the literary public sphere | 92 |
The rise of the lending library | 104 |
The public and its problems | 110 |
Writing publics eighteenthcentury authorship | 123 |
The status of the author in England France and Germany | 124 |
the rise of copyright | 137 |
Women and authorship | 148 |
From courts to consumers theater publics | 160 |
The stage legitimated | 162 |
The theater and the court | 166 |
London | 171 |
Paris | 177 |
Drinking in public taverns and coffeehouses | 226 |
Alcohol and sociability | 227 |
the case of London | 229 |
from cabaret to cafe | 235 |
The political culture of coffee | 240 |
Coffee capitalism and the world of learning | 244 |
Coffeehouse sociability | 247 |
Freemasonry toward civil society | 252 |
The rise of freemasonry | 254 |
Inclusion and exclusion | 257 |
Freemasonry and politics | 262 |
Conclusion | 273 |
277 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
absolutist aristocratic audience Aufklärung authors became Berlin Bluestockings book trade bourgeois Britain British Burgtheater cafés Cambridge censorship circulation clientele coffee coffeehouses Comédie Française commercial court critics crown Darnton debate discourse drinking early eighteenth century early modern elite empire English Enlightenment public sphere epistolary novel Étienne François Europe female freemasonry French Revolution German Habermas Hanoverian History Holy Roman Empire household important increasingly institutions Jahrhundert Jansenist Jewish Journal Leipzig lending libraries letters literary market London Louis Louis XIV Louis-Sébastien Mercier male monarchy moral weeklies Necker newspapers noble novels Old Regime opposition Oxford pamphlets Parisian parlements parliament parterre patrons percent period philosophes political culture popular print culture Protestant provincial public opinion public sphere published Quoted radical readers reading realm reform relatively Robert Darnton role royal salon Samuel Johnson seventeenth seventeenth-century social society stage Suzanne Necker taverns theater tion traditional Unigenitus Vienna Viennese Whig Wilkes women writers wrote York
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