`Ενα δοκίμιο ερωτικού και θρησκευτικού στοχασμού μέσα από τα συμπεράσματα της συγκριτικής θρησκειολογίας και της ψυχολογίας του βάθους.
Burckhardt's historical writings did much to establish the importance of art in the study of history; indeed, he was one of the "founding fathers of art history" but also one of the original creators of cultural history. According to John Lukacs, he was the first master of cultural history, which seeks to describe the spirit and the forms of expression of a particular age, a particular people, or a particular place. His innovative approach to historical research stressed the importance of art and its inestimable value as a primary source for the study of history. He was one of the first historians to rise above the narrow nineteenth-century notion that "history is past politics and politics current history."[4] Burckhardt's unsystematic approach to history was strongly opposed to the interpretations of Hegelianism, which was popular at the time; economism as an interpretation of history; and positivism, which had come to dominate scientific discourses (including the discourse of the social sciences).
In
1838. Burckhardt made his first journey to Italy and published his first
important article, "Bemerkungen über schweizerische Kathedralen"
("Remarks about Swiss Cathedrals"). Burckhardt delivered a series of
lectures at the University of Basel, which were published in 1943 by Pantheon
Books Inc. under the title Force and Freedom: An Interpretation of History
by Jacob Burckhardt. In 1847 he brought out new editions of Kugler's two
great works, Geschichte der Malerei and Kunstgeschichte, and in
1853 published his own work, Die Zeit Constantins des Grossen ("The
Age of Constantine the Great"). He spent the greater part of the years
1853–1854 in Italy, collecting materials for his 1855 Der Cicerone: Eine
Anleitung zum Genuss der Kunstwerke Italiens (7th German edition, 1899),
also dedicated to Kugler. This work, "the finest travel guide that has
ever been written"[5] which covered sculpture and architecture, as well as painting, became an indispensable
guide to the art traveller in Italy.
About
half of the original edition was devoted to the art of the Renaissance. Thus Burckhardt was naturally led to write the
two books for which he is best known, his 1860 Die Kultur der Renaissance in
Italien ("The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy") (English
translation, by SGC Middlemore, in 2 vols., London, 1878), and his 1867 Geschichte
der Renaissance in Italien ("The History of the Renaissance in
Italy"). The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy was the most
influential interpretation of the Italian Renaissance in the nineteenth century
and is still widely read. Burckhardt and the German historian Georg Voigt founded the historical study of the Renaissance.
In contrast to Voigt, who confined his studies to early Italian humanism,
Burckhardt dealt with all aspects of Renaissance society.
Burckhardt
considered the study of ancient history an intellectual necessity and was a
highly respected scholar of Greek civilization. "The Greeks and Greek
Civilization" sums up the relevant lectures, "Griechische
Kulturgeschichte", which Burckhardt first gave in 1872 and which he
repeated until 1885. At his death, he was working on a four-volume survey of
Greek civilization.
Friedrich Nietzsche,
appointed professor of classical philology at Basel in 1869 at the age of 24,
admired Burckhardt and attended some of his lectures. Both men were admirers of
the late Arthur Schopenhauer.
Nietzsche believed Burckhardt agreed with the thesis of his The Birth of
Tragedy, namely that Greek culture was defined by opposing
"Apollonian" and "Dionysian" tendencies. Nietzsche and
Burckhardt enjoyed each other's intellectual company, even as Burckhardt kept
his distance from Nietzsche's evolving philosophy. Their extensive
correspondence over a number of years has been published. Burckhardt's student Heinrich Wölfflin
succeeded him at the University of Basel at the age of only twenty-eight.
(πηγή: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Burckhardt )
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