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Wilhelm von Humboldt and Transcultural Communication in a Multicultural World: Translating Humanity
Hardback

Wilhelm von Humboldt and Transcultural Communication in a Multicultural World: Translating Humanity

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Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835) is the progenitor of modern linguistics and the originator of the modern teaching and research university. However, his work has received remarkably little attention in the English-speaking world. Humboldt conceives language as the source of cognition as well as communication, both rooted in the possibility of human dialogue. In the same way, his idea of the university posits the free encounter between radically different personalities as the source of education for freedom. For Humboldt, both linguistic and intellectual communication are predicated firstly on dialogue between persons, which is the prerequisite for all intercultural understanding.

Linking Humboldt’s concept of dialogue to his idea of translation between languages, persons, and cultures, this book shows how Humboldt’s thought is of great contemporary relevance. Humboldt shows a way beyond the false alternatives of culturalism (the demand that a plurality of cultural and faith-based traditions be recognized as sources of ethical and political legitimacy in the modern world) and universalism (the assertion of the primacy of a universal culture of human rights and the renewal of the European Enlightenment project). John Walker explains how Humboldt’s work emerges from the intellectual conflicts of his time and yet directly addresses the concerns of our own post-secular and multicultural age.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United States
Date
25 October 2022
Pages
288
ISBN
9781571139757

Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835) is the progenitor of modern linguistics and the originator of the modern teaching and research university. However, his work has received remarkably little attention in the English-speaking world. Humboldt conceives language as the source of cognition as well as communication, both rooted in the possibility of human dialogue. In the same way, his idea of the university posits the free encounter between radically different personalities as the source of education for freedom. For Humboldt, both linguistic and intellectual communication are predicated firstly on dialogue between persons, which is the prerequisite for all intercultural understanding.

Linking Humboldt’s concept of dialogue to his idea of translation between languages, persons, and cultures, this book shows how Humboldt’s thought is of great contemporary relevance. Humboldt shows a way beyond the false alternatives of culturalism (the demand that a plurality of cultural and faith-based traditions be recognized as sources of ethical and political legitimacy in the modern world) and universalism (the assertion of the primacy of a universal culture of human rights and the renewal of the European Enlightenment project). John Walker explains how Humboldt’s work emerges from the intellectual conflicts of his time and yet directly addresses the concerns of our own post-secular and multicultural age.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Country
United States
Date
25 October 2022
Pages
288
ISBN
9781571139757