This book offers an overview of bourgeois culture and aspects of everyday life in the German cultural area from the Renaissance to the end of the 18th century. At the same time the reader is introduced to fundamental research problems. The spectrum of topics ranges from life styles to clothing and eating habits, from consciousness of time to rites de passage , birth, marriage and death. Special attention is paid to the role of female and male citizens in music, literature and fine arts. This is a concise introduction for history and art history students, scholars and everyone interested in the…mehr
This book offers an overview of bourgeois culture and aspects of everyday life in the German cultural area from the Renaissance to the end of the 18th century. At the same time the reader is introduced to fundamental research problems. The spectrum of topics ranges from life styles to clothing and eating habits, from consciousness of time to rites de passage , birth, marriage and death. Special attention is paid to the role of female and male citizens in music, literature and fine arts. This is a concise introduction for history and art history students, scholars and everyone interested in the pre-history of the modern world. References from important sources define the text; together they are useful resources for teaching.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
Studies in Medieval and Reformation Traditions Vol.115
Professor Dr. Bernd Roeck, University of Zurich, has published numerous books and essays on the social and cultural history of early modern Europe, amongst others Eine Stadt in Krieg und Frieden (1989), Außenseiter, Randgruppen, Minderheiten (1991), Florenz 1900 (2001), Das historische Auge (2004), and Piero della Francesca, Geißelung (2006).
Inhaltsangabe
List of Illustrations
Foreword
I. Introduction II. The Character of the Early Modern City in the Holy Roman Empire III. The Burghers' Lifestyle IV. Aspects of the Daily Life V. The Burgher Family VI. Historical Microcosms: The Life of the Individual VII. Beyond Daily Life: Amusements, Music and Dance, Entertainment and Theater VIII. Bürgertum and the Arts IX. Bürgertum and Humanism X. Burgher Culture in the Baroque and Enlightenment: Phases and Institutions XI. The Cultural Function of the German City in the 17th and 18th Centuries XII. The Way to Arcadia XIII. The Invention of the Cultural History of the German Bourgeoisie: Artworks as Sources and Lieux de mémoire
Sources 1. In search of beauty: Albrecht Dürer in Italy. From Albrecht Dürer's letters and his art-theory (1506) 2. A Southern German Imperial city at the beginning of the 16th century. From Johannes Cochlaeus' Germania (1512) 3. A mastersinger as Luther's follower. Hans Sachs, The Nightingale of Wittenberg (1523) 4. Ghosts and heretics in old Basel. From the memoir of Felix Platter (1540/1559) 5. A document of the civilization process. From Friedrich Dedekinds Grobianus (1549) 6. The city of the Fugger: The bi-confessional Augsburg. From Michel de Montaignes' Diary of a Journey to Spas (1580/1581) 7. Conjugal love in the 16th century. From the correspondence of Magdalena and Balathasar Paumgartner (1582-1594) 8. Everyday life in Cologne during the 16th century. From Hermann von Weinsberg's memoirs (1589/90) 9. Travelling Experiences in Germany in the Year of 1611: Baden und Frankfurt. From Thomas Coryate's Crudities 10. The horrors of the Thirty Years' War. The besieged city of Augsburg (1634/35) 11. Life remembrances of 17th-century architect. From Elias Holl's House Chronicle (before 1646) 12. An agent of an artist's fame. From Joachim von Sandrart's Teutscher Academie (German Academy) (1675) 13. How to manage a Christian household. From Franciscus Florinus' House-Rules (1705) 14. A French glance at Berlin and Hamburg. From Johann Caspar Riesbeck's Letters of a Travelling Frenchman (1739) 15. An enlightened glance at old cities. From Wilhelm Ludwig Wekhrlin's Anselmus Rabiosus (1778) 16. Enlightenment and tolerance. The "Ringparabel" (Parable of the ring) in Lessing's Nathan the Wise 17. The most famous definition of Enlightenment. Immanuel Kant, What is Enlightenment? (1784) 18. Education in the period of Enlightenment. Legal rules for relations between parents and children (1794) 19. A boyhood in 18th-century Frankfurt. From Goethe's Poetry and Truth 20. The German national character. From Germaine de Staël, On Germany (1813)
I. Introduction II. The Character of the Early Modern City in the Holy Roman Empire III. The Burghers' Lifestyle IV. Aspects of the Daily Life V. The Burgher Family VI. Historical Microcosms: The Life of the Individual VII. Beyond Daily Life: Amusements, Music and Dance, Entertainment and Theater VIII. Bürgertum and the Arts IX. Bürgertum and Humanism X. Burgher Culture in the Baroque and Enlightenment: Phases and Institutions XI. The Cultural Function of the German City in the 17th and 18th Centuries XII. The Way to Arcadia XIII. The Invention of the Cultural History of the German Bourgeoisie: Artworks as Sources and Lieux de mémoire
Sources 1. In search of beauty: Albrecht Dürer in Italy. From Albrecht Dürer's letters and his art-theory (1506) 2. A Southern German Imperial city at the beginning of the 16th century. From Johannes Cochlaeus' Germania (1512) 3. A mastersinger as Luther's follower. Hans Sachs, The Nightingale of Wittenberg (1523) 4. Ghosts and heretics in old Basel. From the memoir of Felix Platter (1540/1559) 5. A document of the civilization process. From Friedrich Dedekinds Grobianus (1549) 6. The city of the Fugger: The bi-confessional Augsburg. From Michel de Montaignes' Diary of a Journey to Spas (1580/1581) 7. Conjugal love in the 16th century. From the correspondence of Magdalena and Balathasar Paumgartner (1582-1594) 8. Everyday life in Cologne during the 16th century. From Hermann von Weinsberg's memoirs (1589/90) 9. Travelling Experiences in Germany in the Year of 1611: Baden und Frankfurt. From Thomas Coryate's Crudities 10. The horrors of the Thirty Years' War. The besieged city of Augsburg (1634/35) 11. Life remembrances of 17th-century architect. From Elias Holl's House Chronicle (before 1646) 12. An agent of an artist's fame. From Joachim von Sandrart's Teutscher Academie (German Academy) (1675) 13. How to manage a Christian household. From Franciscus Florinus' House-Rules (1705) 14. A French glance at Berlin and Hamburg. From Johann Caspar Riesbeck's Letters of a Travelling Frenchman (1739) 15. An enlightened glance at old cities. From Wilhelm Ludwig Wekhrlin's Anselmus Rabiosus (1778) 16. Enlightenment and tolerance. The "Ringparabel" (Parable of the ring) in Lessing's Nathan the Wise 17. The most famous definition of Enlightenment. Immanuel Kant, What is Enlightenment? (1784) 18. Education in the period of Enlightenment. Legal rules for relations between parents and children (1794) 19. A boyhood in 18th-century Frankfurt. From Goethe's Poetry and Truth 20. The German national character. From Germaine de Staël, On Germany (1813)
Select Bibliography (Works after 1991) Index
Rezensionen
"a compendium of solid general knowledge about bourgeois life and culture in early modern central Europe [...] a valuable basic reference book" . Michaela Hohkamp, Freie Universität Berlin. In: Journal of Modern History , Vol. 82, No. 1, pp. 223-225 (March 2010)
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