3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions

This study is focused on a cosmopolitan group of both famous and less famous radical intellectuals from both sides of the Atlantic—some of them of popular origin and self-educated—all linked by relations of personal friendship or at least col- laboration or contiguity: Thomas Paine, Joel Barlow, Nic...

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Main Author: Erica Joy Mannucci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Torino 2013-12-01
Series:Journal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas
Online Access:http://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/jihi/article/view/428
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spelling doaj-2df23ffed1014e34a597ccda51b01d382020-11-25T03:51:39ZengUniversità degli Studi di TorinoJournal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas2280-85742013-12-012410.13135/2280-8574/4283093. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of RevolutionsErica Joy Mannucci0University of Milano-BicoccaThis study is focused on a cosmopolitan group of both famous and less famous radical intellectuals from both sides of the Atlantic—some of them of popular origin and self-educated—all linked by relations of personal friendship or at least col- laboration or contiguity: Thomas Paine, Joel Barlow, Nicolas de Bonneville, John Oswald, Joseph Ritson. The analysis of the language strategies they used to attempt a democratization of the universal communication that had been until then kept among the educated members of the Republic of letters—in particular insofar as the high tradition of the critique of revealed religion was concerned, considered here as an absolutely crucial point—centers on the themes of political etymology and of confidence in the performative energy of decoded words.http://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/jihi/article/view/428
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erica Joy Mannucci
spellingShingle Erica Joy Mannucci
3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions
Journal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas
author_facet Erica Joy Mannucci
author_sort Erica Joy Mannucci
title 3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions
title_short 3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions
title_full 3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions
title_fullStr 3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions
title_full_unstemmed 3. Crossing Boundaries: Cosmopolitanism, Secularism and Words in the Age of Revolutions
title_sort 3. crossing boundaries: cosmopolitanism, secularism and words in the age of revolutions
publisher Università degli Studi di Torino
series Journal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas
issn 2280-8574
publishDate 2013-12-01
description This study is focused on a cosmopolitan group of both famous and less famous radical intellectuals from both sides of the Atlantic—some of them of popular origin and self-educated—all linked by relations of personal friendship or at least col- laboration or contiguity: Thomas Paine, Joel Barlow, Nicolas de Bonneville, John Oswald, Joseph Ritson. The analysis of the language strategies they used to attempt a democratization of the universal communication that had been until then kept among the educated members of the Republic of letters—in particular insofar as the high tradition of the critique of revealed religion was concerned, considered here as an absolutely crucial point—centers on the themes of political etymology and of confidence in the performative energy of decoded words.
url http://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/jihi/article/view/428
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