ABSTRACT

The notions of culture and civilization are at the heart of European self-image. This book focuses on how space and spatiality contributed to defining the concepts of culture and civilization and, conversely, what kind of spatial ramifications "culture" and "civilization" entailed. These questions have vital importance to the understanding of this formative period of modern Europe.

The chapters of this volume concentrate on the following themes: What were the sites of culture, civilization and Bildung and how were these sites employed in defining these concepts? What kind of borders did this process of definition and its inherent spatial imagination produce? What were the connecting routes between the supposed centers and peripheries? What were the strategies of envisioning, negotiating and transforming cultural territories in early nineteenth-century Europe?

This book adds new perspectives on ways of approaching spatiality in history by investigating, for example: the decisive role of the French revolution, the persistent interest in classical civilization and its sites, emerging urbanism and the culture of the cities, the changing constellations between centers and peripheries and the colonial extensions, or transfigurations, of culture. It also pays attention to the spatiality of culture as a metaphor, but simultaneously emphasizes the production of space in an era of technological innovation and change.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part I|59 pages

Bildung, Civilisation and Cultural Space

chapter 2|19 pages

Classical Civilisation Confronts Modern Nationalism

Greek Colonies in Early Nineteenth-Century Scholarship

chapter 3|19 pages

Between Nostalgia and Utopia

The Construction of Jewish Cultural Space in Early Nineteenth-Century Europe

part II|56 pages

Centres and Borderlands

chapter 4|17 pages

The Colonial Displacement of Culture

Social Spaces and Boundaries in a Nineteenth-Century Diary from Greenland

part III|60 pages

Challenging Spatial Boundaries

chapter 9|18 pages

Travelling through Urban Space

The Romantic Imagination of E. T. A. Hoffmann