Worlds Made by Words: Scholarship and Community in the Modern West |  | Author: Anthony Grafton Publisher: Harvard University Press Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $23.94 as of 9/6/2010 20:06 CDT details You Save: $6.01 (20%)
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Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 432 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 6.3 x 1.5
ISBN: 0674032578 Dewey Decimal Number: 940.1 EAN: 9780674032576 ASIN: 0674032578
Publication Date: March 31, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
In this book Anthony Grafton lets us in on one of the great secrets of scholars and intellectuals: although scholars lead solitary lives in order to win independence of mind, they also enjoy the conviviality of sharing a project sustained by common ideals, practices, and institutions. It’s like Masonry, but without the secret handshakes. Grafton reveals the microdynamics of the scholarly life through a series of essays on institutions and on scholars ranging from early modern polymaths to modern intellectual historians to American thinkers and writers. He takes as his starting point the republic of letters—that loose society of intellectuals that first took shape in the sixteenth century and continued into the eighteenth. Its inhabitants were highly original, individual thinkers and writers. Yet as Grafton shows, they were all formed, in some way, by the very groups and disciplines that they set out to build. In our noisy, caffeinated world it has never been more challenging to be a scholar. When many of our fellow citizens seem to have forgotten why we collect books in the buildings we call libraries, Grafton’s engaging, erudite essays could be a rallying cry for the revival of the liberal arts. (20090313)
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| Customer Reviews: The Republic of Letters March 30, 2009 Christian Schlect (Yakima, Washington/USA) 25 out of 33 found this review helpful
Anthony Grafton's gift for writing is largely hidden from view in some of the early chapters of this book made up of previously published articles and lectures.
When writing on obscure subjects for a narrow and elite readership in such publications as the Journal of Ideas or American Scholar or before university scholars in seminars at Stanford or Cambridge, the author's voice is naturally scholarly and not aimed at the general reader.
However, when writing for a magazine like The New Yorker Professor Grafton's gift for a wider communication is fully illuminated. I found the last two chapters in this book (on his father trying to interview Hannah Arendt and on the future of books in a Google world) worth the trouble of wading through the initial material that focuses on people few (certainly not I) had ever heard of on issues of seemingly limited importance to a common reader of today (like me).
I think Professor Grafton should now write a full, seamless book on a major modern theme wherein he can put to use both his talent for vivid language and the sharp reporting skills he certainly inherited from his father. Any such new book will indirectly, but still greatly, benefit from the vast knowledge he has obviously acquired over a lifetime of deep research into obscure medieval scholars and early classical ideas.
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