Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Ezra Stiles and North America in the Early Modern Republic of Letters

View through CrossRef
For over two decades, historians of the early modern world have been charting the practices, principles, and ideologies of the “Republic of Letters,” an intellectual community forged via paper, not place. Few, however, have ever ventured to consider America's place in this scholarly republic. This article charts in new detail the aspirations—and shortcomings—of eighteenth-century American efforts to participate in a truly transnational, intellectual community. Focusing on the life of Ezra Stiles (1727–95), it will dig into hundreds of unpublished, untranslated manuscripts, as well as scores of overlooked early modern periodicals and publications. What emerges is a glimpse into how Stiles especially strove to place America on the intellectual map of the early modern world. Stiles's plan was to lay the academic groundwork for his new nation by forging connections between universities and promoting a unified intellectual front to the Republic of Letters abroad. In one sense, this vision was remarkably shrewd, standing out as one of the first efforts to connect colonial universities. On the personal level, however, this (over)emphasis on institutions came at a cost. Too preoccupied with the colonial American universities and too little focused on publication, Stiles would ultimately struggle to be recognized as a citizen of the scholarly republic.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Ezra Stiles and North America in the Early Modern Republic of Letters
Description:
For over two decades, historians of the early modern world have been charting the practices, principles, and ideologies of the “Republic of Letters,” an intellectual community forged via paper, not place.
Few, however, have ever ventured to consider America's place in this scholarly republic.
This article charts in new detail the aspirations—and shortcomings—of eighteenth-century American efforts to participate in a truly transnational, intellectual community.
Focusing on the life of Ezra Stiles (1727–95), it will dig into hundreds of unpublished, untranslated manuscripts, as well as scores of overlooked early modern periodicals and publications.
What emerges is a glimpse into how Stiles especially strove to place America on the intellectual map of the early modern world.
Stiles's plan was to lay the academic groundwork for his new nation by forging connections between universities and promoting a unified intellectual front to the Republic of Letters abroad.
In one sense, this vision was remarkably shrewd, standing out as one of the first efforts to connect colonial universities.
On the personal level, however, this (over)emphasis on institutions came at a cost.
Too preoccupied with the colonial American universities and too little focused on publication, Stiles would ultimately struggle to be recognized as a citizen of the scholarly republic.

Related Results

African Annals of Medicine reviewers in 2024
African Annals of Medicine reviewers in 2024
Le comité éditorial des Annales Africaines de Médecine tient à remercier les lecteurs qui ont analysé les manuscrits soumis pour publication au cours de l’année 2024 et ont ainsi d...
Greek Literary Letters
Greek Literary Letters
What do we mean by Greek literary letters. Letters in literature? Literature in letter form? Do we include “private” letters (e.g., Plutarch to his wife) if they are later publishe...
Kirjažanrist Euroopa kultuuriloos ning kirjavahetuste avaldamisest ja uurimisest Eestis
Kirjažanrist Euroopa kultuuriloos ning kirjavahetuste avaldamisest ja uurimisest Eestis
The article deals with the emergence, development and blooming of the letter genre in European cultural history until the middle of the 20th century. The oldest letters that have s...
“And why may not I go to college?” Alethea Stiles and Women’s Latin Learning in Early America
“And why may not I go to college?” Alethea Stiles and Women’s Latin Learning in Early America
Presented here for the first time are the letters of a young, little-known American woman, Alethea Stiles (1745-1784), to her learned cousin Ezra Stiles (1727-1795), the seventh pr...
Dimensi Oukumenis Dalam Kepemimpinan Ezra Dan Nehemia: Pembelajaran Untuk Dialog Antar-Gereja Kontemporer
Dimensi Oukumenis Dalam Kepemimpinan Ezra Dan Nehemia: Pembelajaran Untuk Dialog Antar-Gereja Kontemporer
Penelitian ini menganalisis dimensi oikumenis dalam kepemimpinan Ezra dan Nehemia, dua tokoh kunci dalam pemulihan bangsa Israel pasca-pembuangan di Babel. Penelitian ini bertujuan...
Ezra-Nehemiah
Ezra-Nehemiah
The book of Ezra-Nehemiah is the only book of the Bible to narrate the events of the post-exile. With the rise of the Persian Empire, the Judeans return to Jerusalem with the inten...

Back to Top