
Humankinds
Description
Alles über E-Books | Antworten auf Fragen rund um E-Books, Kopierschutz und Dateiformate finden Sie in unserem Info- & Hilfebereich.
Anthropology is a notoriously polysemous term. Within a continental European academic context, it is usually employed in the sense of
philosophical anthropology
, and mainly concerned with exploring concepts of a universal human nature. By contrast, Anglo-American scholarship almost exclusively associates anthropology with the investigation of cultural and ethnic differences (
cultural anthropology
). How these two main traditions (and their 'derivations' such as literary anthropology, historical anthropology, ethnology, ethnography, intercultural studies) relate to each other is a matter of debate. Both, however, have their roots in the path-breaking changes that occurred within sixteenth and early seventeenth-century culture and scientific discourse. It was in fact during this period that the term anthropology first acquired the meanings on which its current usage is based. The Renaissance did not 'invent' the human. But the period that gave rise to 'humanism' witnessed an unprecedented diversification of the concept that was at its very core. The question of what defines the human became increasingly contested as new developments like the emergence of the natural sciences, religious pluralisation, as well as colonial expansion, were undermining old certainties. The proliferation of doctrines of the human in the early modern age bears out the assumption that anthropology is a discipline of crisis, seeking to establish sets of common values and discursive norms in situations when authority finds itself under pressure.
More details
Other editions
Additional editions

Persons
Content
2 - Introduction [Seite 8]
3 - Literary Sites of the Human [Seite 26]
3.1 - Liminal Anthropology in Shakespeare's Plays [Seite 28]
3.2 - The Space of the Human and the Place of the Poet: Excursions into English Topographical Poetry [Seite 48]
4 - Religious Beings [Seite 76]
4.1 - Among the Fairies: Religion and the Anthropology of Ritual in Shakespeare [Seite 78]
4.2 - Golding's Metamorphoses, Shakespeare's Twelfth Night and Puritan Anthropology [Seite 98]
5 - Negotiating the Foreign [Seite 114]
5.1 - When Golden times convents: Shakespeare's Eastern Promise [Seite 116]
5.2 - "Cony Caught by Walking Mort": Indigenous Exoticism in the Literature of Roguery [Seite 144]
5.3 - Renaissance Anthropologies of Security: Shipwreck, Barbary fear and the Meaning of 'Insurance' [Seite 164]
6 - Human and Non-Human [Seite 190]
6.1 - Shakespeare's Public Animals [Seite 192]
6.2 - "Fellow-brethren and compeers": Montaigne's Rapprochement Between Man and Animal [Seite 206]
6.3 - Animal Art/Human Art: Imagined Borderlines in the Renaissance [Seite 224]
7 - Thinking the Human [Seite 252]
7.1 - "Now they're substances and men": The Masque of Lethe and the Recovery of Humankind [Seite 254]
7.2 - Shakespeare Ever After: Posthumanism and Shakespeare [Seite 268]
8 - Index [Seite 286]
System requirements
File format: PDF
Copy protection: Watermark-DRM (Digital Rights Management)
System requirements:
- Computer (Windows; MacOS X; Linux): Use the free software Adobe Reader, Adobe Digital Editions, or any other PDF viewer of your choice (see eBook Help).
- Tablet/Smartphone (Android; iOS): Install the free app Adobe Digital Editions or another reading app for eBooks, e.g., PocketBook (see eBook Help).
- E-reader: Bookeen, Kobo, Pocketbook, Sony, Tolino and many more (only limited: Kindle).
The file format PDF always displays a book page identically on any hardware. This makes PDF suitable for complex layouts such as those used in textbooks and reference books (images, tables, columns, footnotes). Unfortunately, on the small screens of e-readers or smartphones, PDFs are rather annoying, requiring too much scrolling.
This eBook uses Watermark-DRM, a „soft” copy protection. This means that there are no technical restrictions to prevent illegal distribution. However, there is a personalised watermark embedded in the eBook that can be used to identify the purchaser of the eBook in the event of misuse and to provide evidence for legal purposes.
For more information, see our eBook Help page.