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

A question of genre: Philip Melanchthon's oratorical debut at Wittenberg University

View through CrossRef
AbstractThe speech Philip Melanchthon gave on 29 August 1518 at the University of Wittenberg to initiate his professorship is an impressive piece of humanist idealism. Already its title, De corrigendis adolescentiae studiis (On the reform of the studies for the young) reveals his earnest ambitions in introducing reform. Not incidentally, thus, the speech received a lot of attention immediately after its delivery and enjoyed a remarkable popularity even decades after. The speech marks, however, not only an interesting object of study in terms of its content but also in terms of its generic form. Usually labelled as a declamation, this study will revaluate this generic attribution, for the first time, by arguing that the declamation as an academic genre was only introduced into the German academic landscape after Melanchthon's debut in Wittenberg and that De corrigendis adolescentiae studiis does not convincingly fit the standards of declamatory speech in many other respects. It will be shown that the category more apt for talking about Melanchthon's speech is that of the inaugural oration – a genre yet highly underappreciated in modern research on early modern academic oratory.
Title: A question of genre: Philip Melanchthon's oratorical debut at Wittenberg University
Description:
AbstractThe speech Philip Melanchthon gave on 29 August 1518 at the University of Wittenberg to initiate his professorship is an impressive piece of humanist idealism.
Already its title, De corrigendis adolescentiae studiis (On the reform of the studies for the young) reveals his earnest ambitions in introducing reform.
Not incidentally, thus, the speech received a lot of attention immediately after its delivery and enjoyed a remarkable popularity even decades after.
The speech marks, however, not only an interesting object of study in terms of its content but also in terms of its generic form.
Usually labelled as a declamation, this study will revaluate this generic attribution, for the first time, by arguing that the declamation as an academic genre was only introduced into the German academic landscape after Melanchthon's debut in Wittenberg and that De corrigendis adolescentiae studiis does not convincingly fit the standards of declamatory speech in many other respects.
It will be shown that the category more apt for talking about Melanchthon's speech is that of the inaugural oration – a genre yet highly underappreciated in modern research on early modern academic oratory.

Related Results

Philip Melanchthon: Speaking for the Reformation
Philip Melanchthon: Speaking for the Reformation
Already theological conflicts during his lifetime have made forming an accurate picture of Philip Melanchthon’s contribution to the Reformation difficult. A close examination of hi...
Philip Melanchthon
Philip Melanchthon
While a student at the Universities of Heidelberg and Tübingen, Philip Melanchthon (b. 1497–d. 1560) had won recognition for his abilities as a promulgator of the reforms of the bi...
Violin miniature in creativity by Liudmila Shukailo: features of the genre interpretation
Violin miniature in creativity by Liudmila Shukailo: features of the genre interpretation
Background. Rapidness of information flows of contemporary life enforces to concentrate a significant amount of information in small formats. This fact meaningfully increases socia...
Lei e evangelho: a relação que conduz o pensamento de Filipe Melanchthon
Lei e evangelho: a relação que conduz o pensamento de Filipe Melanchthon
Esta dissertação tem como foco analisar a relação entre lei e evangelho no pensamento de Filipe Melanchthon (1947-1560), a partir da obra Loci Theologici, de 1521. Melanchthon foi ...
Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt
Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt
Andreas Rudolff Bodenstein (b. 1486–d. 1541) is usually named after his hometown Karlstadt in Franconia (sometimes spelled as Carlstadt). Karlstadt was one of the most influential ...
Martin Luther, Philip Melanchthon, and Their Wittenberg Colleagues
Martin Luther, Philip Melanchthon, and Their Wittenberg Colleagues
The German Reformation, sparked by the publication of Martin Luther’s 95 Theses in 1517, unfolded parallel to another intellectual phenomenon then sweeping centers of higher educat...
The Wittenberg Scholia on the Homeric Poem
The Wittenberg Scholia on the Homeric Poem
Abstract This chapter is a study of comprehensive marginal notes on the Iliad and the Odyssey dating from the University of Wittenberg in the 1550s. It argues attrib...
Philip Melanchthon
Philip Melanchthon
Abstract Luther’s companion lectures on the Nicomachean Ethics from the early 1530s to 1560. In this work, Aristotle’s iustitia remains the focus of his attention. W...

Back to Top