Transactions



Lionel Gossman


$29.00

978-0-87169-975-6



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Winner of the John Frederick Lewis Award for 2007

Friedrich Overbeck’s “Italia und Germania” (1811-1828) is a well-known image in its native Germany, where it is usually seen as an allegory of the perennial longing of German artists and poets for the beauty and harmony of the land “where the lemon tree blooms.” It is not so well known, outside specialist circles, that the earliest sketches for this iconic painting bore the title “Sulamith (the Shulamite of the Song of Solomon) and Maria” and formed part of a series of drawings and texts produced and shared by Overbeck and his close friend Franz Pforr, the young founders of the school of painters generally referred to as “Nazarenes.” Closely linked to the philosopher Friedrich Schlegel and his wife Dorothea, the daughter of the celebrated Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn and a convert, along with her husband, to Roman Catholicism, the Nazarenes advocated the renewal of earlier and purer forms of art and religion and looked forward to a condition in which things that had been separated from their original unity—not only art and religion, but word and idea, poetry and philosophy, feminine and masculine, and, not least, Jews and Christians—would be brought together again, as Overbeck said, “in harmony and mutual respect.” The contextualization of Overbeck’s “Italia und Germania” in this essay reveals a painting that is a rich repository of meanings, an emblem not only of the sisterhood of North and South, the early German and early Italian traditions in art, but of the general Romantic longing for reconciliation, reunion, and the overcoming of historical alienation.

Lionel Gossman is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Romance Languages and Literature at Princeton University. He is a member of the American Philosophical Society, elected in 1996.

Lionel Gossman addresses a topic of general importance, which is the relationship between art, life, and religious belief. He has an impressive knowledge of the historical situation and philosophical background of the time. He gives excellent translations from original German sources that are not only accurate but may enable the Anglophone reader to truly grasp the spirit of the sources. This book serves as a thoughtful and elegantly written introduction to the way of thinking of one of the most important of the Nazarene painters.

Hubert Locher
Lehrstuhl für Neuere und neueste Kunstgeschichte
Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste
Stuttgart, GERMANY

Lionel Gossman's study offers an important interpretation of Overbeck's painting. It treats the evolution of the Nazarene artists' preoccupation with religious issues in an engaging manner and offers a social-historical and theological context to Overbeck's painting by looking interestingly at a wide range of issues and contacts in his early Nazarene period. The book engages readers as it situates the painting in an innovative manner and touches on many interesting issues of the period.

Richard I. Cohen
The Hebrew University, Jerusalem

author of Jewish Icons: Art and Society in Modern Europe



Edward G. Longacre


$29.00

978-0-87169-974-9



“The ‘new military history’ is new in its concern for military history as a part of the whole of history, not isolated from the rest, for the military as a projection of society at large, for the relationships of the soldier and the state, for military institutions and military thought.” So wrote Russell F. Weigley, one of the most accomplished and respected military historians of the latter half of the twentieth century. Beyond Combat includes a brief biography of Dr. Weigley by the editors, an introduction by Dennis F. Showalter, essays by nine of Dr. Weigley’s PhDs, and a select bibliography of his work.

Edward G. Longacre is Staff Historian, HQ Air Combat Command, Langley Air Force Base, VA. Theodore J. Zeman is a history professor at Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia, PA.



Alexander Woronzoff-Dashkoff


$29.00

978-0-87169-973-2



A woman of letters and the first woman member of the American Philosophical Society, Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova (née Vorontsova) was also the first modern stateswoman in Russia. Early in her life she dressed in an officer’s uniform and boldly stepped forward to play an active role in the political arena, where she participated in the palace revolution of 1762. Subsequently, Dashkova was appointed director of the Academy of Sciences by Catherine II and she founded and became president of the Russian Academy. For close to twelve years, she headed both these prestigious academic institutions. She was a leading figure in eighteenth-century Russian culture as she strove to institute reforms, to adapt and apply the ideas of the Enlightenment, and to establish new approaches to the education of Russia’s youth. Sadly, her relationship with her own children was deeply tragic, and later in life she was exiled to the north of Russia. This biography focuses on Dashkova’s efforts in her life and works to isolate, clarify, and define patterns of action, identity, and gender for herself as well as for other women.

Alexander Woronzoff-Dashkoff is Professor of Russian language and literature at Smith College in Massachusetts. Born in Renon, Italy, he received a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California. For many years he worked in the Russian School at Middlebury College, the last nine years as Director of the School. His scholarship has been devoted to the life and works of Ekaterina Dashkova, of whom he is a descendent. He has compiled and annotated the French edition of Dashkova’s autobiography, Mon Histoire: Mémoires d’une Femmes de Lettres Russe àl’Epoque des Lumières, including the letters of Catherine II (Paris: L’Harmattan, 1999).



Janice G. Schimmelman


$29.00

978-0-87169-972-5



The Tintype in America, 1856–1880 is the history of the tintype from its invention in Paris to the end of the wet-plate era. It included the early plate manufacturers Peter Neff (melainotype) and Victor M. Griswold (ferrotype); its process, patents, and presentations; and the society and industry that supported it.

Always suspicious of art, Americans embraced the tintype. They were comfortable with its artlessness and liked the come-as-you-are independence of the thing. It was so quick, so easy, so spontaneous. At the end of the day the stories were real, untouched by the manipulations of artist or photographer, and unencumbered by Romantic notions of moral and civic virtue.

Janice Schimmelman is Professor of Art History at Oakland University in Rochester, MI.



Estelle Haan


$27.00

978-0-87169-971-8



Vincent Bourne (1694-1747) was one of the most, if not the most, popular Latin poets of his day. In its depiction of homely urban scenes and in its sensitive portrayal of animal and civic behavior (and the reciprocity between such behavior) his Latin verse appealed to early eighteenth-century and Romantic sensibilities. The present study examines a broad range of that Latin verse in its classical, neo-Latin, and vernacular contexts with particular attention to the theme of identity (and differing forms of identity). It surveys the quest for identity, reciprocal identities, metropolitan identities, the recreation of identity, and assesses ways in which Bourne's fusion of the classical and the Romantic gave him a unique neo-Latin voice which enabled him to stand out from his predecessors and contemporaries. Appended to the study are the texts (with Haan's translations) of the Latin poetry discussed therein.

Estelle Haan (Sheehan) is Professor of Renaissance and Anglo-Latin Literature at Queen's University Belfast. Previous publications with the American Philosophical Society include From Academia to Amicitia: Milton's Latin Writings and the Italian Academies (Transactions volume 88, part 6) and Vergilius Redivivus: Studies in Joseph Addison's Latin Poetry (Transactions volume 95, part 2).



Albert van Helden

Paper. 72 pp.

$30.00

0-87169-674-6
978-0-87169-674-8



The Invention of the Telescope was first printed by the American Philosophical Society in June 1977. No book on the study of telescopes since that time has surpassed this work of Albert van Helden.

Cornelis de Waard, in his "De uitvinding der verrekijkers" (The Hague, 1906), uncovered many new documents bearing on the genesis of the telescope. Dr. van Helden began this project as a translation of de Waard’s study. However, he decided that the profession and de Waard's memory would be better served by a collection and translation of all the relevant primary sources named in his study.

The year 2008 marks the 400th year of the existence of the telescope, a most appropriate time to reprint The Invention of the Telescope.



Anthony Aveni

Paper, 130 pages (14 front matter, 116 text); 8-page color insert after page 55

$35.00

978-1-60618-025-9



Since antiquity, time in the West has been represented in circular form, the gear wheels of time churning out duration in endless years. At the time of the Spanish conquest dials on round clock faces looked down from facades of cathedrals and town halls, their sonorous tones chiming out the hours that directed people’s religious and workaday lives. Since the Gregorian Calendar Reform coincided with the proliferation of the clock, the subject of time was very much on the minds of sixteenth-century scholars. To judge from the way Spanish chroniclers describe it, the circle was also the principle mode of temporal expression among the New World natives they sought to Catholicize. Anthony Aveni demonstrates that this was decidedly not the case. Rather, the indigenous quadripartite way of perceiving space rendered the expression of time to have been decidedly square.

Circling the Square: How the Conquest Altered the Shape of Time in Mesoamerica examines an array of calendar circles appearing in manuscripts from Central Mexico and the Maya area of Yucatan from the time of sixteenth-century contact up to the eighteenth century.

Dr. Aveni follows the gradual intrusion of Western calendrical particulars into the native format, such as the correspondence between the months and the phases of the moon, the base-twelve format of the divisions of the year and the zodiac, the wind compass, the Olympiad, the concept of the Jubilee, and the leap year. He offers insight into the tension in the first generation of native scribes after the conquest, who were working with radically different ways of knowing, between the imposed requirement to change the way they thought about time and the innate desire to preserve their heritage and their identity.

Anthony F. Aveni is the Robert B. Colgate Professor of Astronomy, Anthropology, and Native American Studies, serving appointments both in the Department of Physics and Astronomy and the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Colgate University. He helped develop the field of archaeoastronomy. Dr. Aveni has taught at Colgate since 1963, and has served in visiting appointments at the University of South Florida, the University of Colorado, Tulane University, and the University of Padua (Italy).



Robert M. Hill II

Paper, 134 pages (10 front matter, 124 text)

$35.00

978-1-60618-026-2



The Xajil Chronicle of the Kaqchikel Maya of Guatemala is topically the most diverse, lengthy, and organizationally complex of the surviving highland-Maya historical texts that were first recorded alphabetically in the colonial period. In this monograph, the author demonstrates that much of the Chronicle was redacted from preconquest pictographic documents, documents that now are lost.

Both the organization and topical coverage allow the author to identify the specific genres of the pictographic originals and to characterize the content of preconquest historical “archives,” as well as gauge the amount of information contained in such documents would necessarily have been committed to memory by indigenous historians.

Robert M. Hill II is Professor of Anthropology at Tulane University. His research, carried out mostly in the highland regions of Guatemala, has refined understanding of how the ancient Maya became the modern Maya. He is the author of several articles and books, including Colonial Cakchiquels: Highland Maya Adaptations to Spanish Rule, 1600–1700 (1992) and, with Judith Maxwell, Kaqchikel Chronicles (2006).



Johann Gustav Droysen
Translated from the German by Flora Kimmich
Preface by G.W. Bowersock; Foreword by A.B. Bosworth

Paper, 628 pages (22 front matter, 606 text)

$35.00

978-1-60618-023-5



Flora Kimmich has translated J. G. Droysen's classic History of Alexander the Great into English for the first time. Through her masterly rendering, she brings this foundational work of modern historiography of the ancient world to a new audience. Based entirely on ancient sources, this is an exhaustive, beautifully narrated account of Alexander, from the origins of the ancient Macedonian kingdom to Alexander's death in Babylon in 323 B.C.

Droysen's interpretation of Alexander, first published in 1833 by a 25-year-old Privatdozent, is colored both by the idealistic exuberance of German romanticism and the wars of liberation and, in a substantially revised second edition published in 1877, by the imperial optimism of a newly consolidated Germany.

This translation of the 1877 edition, with complete notes, does full justice to Droysen's celebrated prose style.

The monograph is enhanced with special introductory selections by Glen W. Bowersock (Professor Emeritus, Institute for Advanced Study) and Brian Bosworth (Senior Honorary Research Fellow, University of Western Australia.

Flora Kimmich translates from German and from French.



William Dr. Anderson, Jr.
Phillip C. Heemstra

Paper, 192 pages (18 front matter, 174 text), with color insert

$35.00

978-1-60618-022-8



 

The authors present a taxonomic review of the Atlantic and eastern Pacific members of the serranid subfamily Anthiinae, providing a much-needed survey of an important group of fishes. This monologue builds upon the literature with the results of examinations of large numbers of museum specimens and a few observations made on living animals.

The book includes a small color insert of select figures.

William D. Anderson, Jr. is with the Grice Marine Biological Laboratory, College of Charleston, in South Carolina. Phillip C. Heemstra is with the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, Republic of South Africa.