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dc.contributor.editorHODACKS, Hanna
dc.contributor.editorNYBERG, Kenneth
dc.contributor.editorVAN DAMME, Stéphane
dc.date.accessioned2018-02-26T16:11:37Z
dc.date.available2018-02-26T16:11:37Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.citationOxford : Voltaire Foundation, 2018, Oxford University studies in the Enlightenment ; 01en
dc.identifier.isbn9780729412056
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/51916
dc.description.abstractThe name of Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) is inscribed in almost every flora and fauna published from the mid-eighteenth century onwards; in this respect he is virtually immortal. In this book a group of specialists argue for the need to re-centre Linnaean science and de-centre Linnaeus the man by exploring the ideas, practices and people connected to his taxonomic innovations. Contributors examine the various techniques, materials and methods that originated within the ‘Linnaean workshop’: paper technologies, publication strategies, and markets for specimens. Fresh analyses of the reception of Linnaeus’s work in Paris, Königsberg, Edinburgh and beyond offer a window on the local contexts of knowledge transfer, including new perspectives on the history of anthropology and stadial theory. The global implications and negotiated nature of these intellectual, social and material developments are further investigated in chapters tracing the experiences and encounters of Linnaean travellers in Africa, Latin America and South Asia. Through focusing on the circulation of Linnaean knowledge and placing it within the context of eighteenth-century globalization, authors provide innovative and important contributions to our understanding of the early modern history of science.en
dc.description.tableofcontentsList of illustrations and tables Preface Notes on naming conventions List of abbreviations Introduction: de-centring and re-centring Linnaeus, Hanna Hodacs, Kenneth Nyberg and Stéphane Van Damme 1. Notebooks, files and slips: Carl Linnaeus and his disciples at work, Isabelle Charmantier 2. What is a botanical author? Pehr Osbeck’s travelogue and the culture of collaborative publishing in Linnaean botany, Bettina Dietz 3. The price of Linnaean natural history: materiality, commerce and change, Hanna Hodacs 4. In the name of Linnaeus: Paris as a disputed capital of natural knowledge (1730-1789), Stéphane Van Damme 5. On the use and abuse of natural history: Linnaean science in Kant’s Königsberg, Jonas Gerlings 6. The Edinburgh connection: Linnaean natural history, Scottish moral philosophy and the colonial implications of Enlightenment thought, Linda Andersson Burnett and Bruce Buchan 7. Negotiating people, plants and empires: the fieldwork of Johann Gerhard König in South and South East Asia (1768-1785), Niklas Thode Jensen 8. Lives of useful curiosity: the global legacy of Pehr Löfling in the long eighteenth century, Kenneth Nyberg and Manuel Lucena Giraldo Summaries Bibliography of works cited Indexen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherVoltaire Foundationen
dc.titleLinnaeus, natural history and the circulation of knowledgeen
dc.typeBooken
eui.subscribe.skiptrue
dc.description.versionBased on the content of a Conference organised by Hanna Hodacs, Kenneth Nyberg & Stéphane Van Damme at the European University Institute, Florence, 14 November 2014.en


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