Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme »
This paper examines political views on Persia in the Weimar Republic of the 1920s. That era witnessed the emergence of a ‘geography of the soul’, combined with the idea of the ‘soul of peoples’, a legacy of political romanticism that echoed with the then fashionable concept of psychology of peoples...
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Presses universitaires de Strasbourg
2017-06-01
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Series: | Recherches Germaniques |
Online Access: | http://journals.openedition.org/rg/828 |
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doaj-ac2d88866e4a43e3ba49300ebe1016d52021-07-08T16:59:45ZdeuPresses universitaires de StrasbourgRecherches Germaniques0399-19892649-860X2017-06-011210311710.4000/rg.828Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme »Catherine RepussardThis paper examines political views on Persia in the Weimar Republic of the 1920s. That era witnessed the emergence of a ‘geography of the soul’, combined with the idea of the ‘soul of peoples’, a legacy of political romanticism that echoed with the then fashionable concept of psychology of peoples (Völkerpsychologie). Geographers and orientalists strove to map out the ‘geography of the Persian soul’ alongside the ‘geography of the German soul’. Here the book Morgenland und Abendland. Landschaft Rasse Kultur zweier Welten (1926), by the atypical geographer and great popularizer of science Ewald Banse (1883-1953), is more specifically addressed. Banse attempted to trace the outlines of a Germano-Persian ‘imagined community’, in the sense of Benedict Anderson. Along with other German orientalists, he intended it to legitimize what he saw as the necessary cultural Germanization of the Orient, under the premise that cultural policy (Kulturpolitik) was the new form of territorial expansion (Raumpolitik).http://journals.openedition.org/rg/828 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Catherine Repussard |
spellingShingle |
Catherine Repussard Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » Recherches Germaniques |
author_facet |
Catherine Repussard |
author_sort |
Catherine Repussard |
title |
Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » |
title_short |
Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » |
title_full |
Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » |
title_fullStr |
Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » |
title_full_unstemmed |
Ewald Banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » |
title_sort |
ewald banse : orientaliste et « géographe de l’âme » |
publisher |
Presses universitaires de Strasbourg |
series |
Recherches Germaniques |
issn |
0399-1989 2649-860X |
publishDate |
2017-06-01 |
description |
This paper examines political views on Persia in the Weimar Republic of the 1920s. That era witnessed the emergence of a ‘geography of the soul’, combined with the idea of the ‘soul of peoples’, a legacy of political romanticism that echoed with the then fashionable concept of psychology of peoples (Völkerpsychologie). Geographers and orientalists strove to map out the ‘geography of the Persian soul’ alongside the ‘geography of the German soul’. Here the book Morgenland und Abendland. Landschaft Rasse Kultur zweier Welten (1926), by the atypical geographer and great popularizer of science Ewald Banse (1883-1953), is more specifically addressed. Banse attempted to trace the outlines of a Germano-Persian ‘imagined community’, in the sense of Benedict Anderson. Along with other German orientalists, he intended it to legitimize what he saw as the necessary cultural Germanization of the Orient, under the premise that cultural policy (Kulturpolitik) was the new form of territorial expansion (Raumpolitik). |
url |
http://journals.openedition.org/rg/828 |
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AT catherinerepussard ewaldbanseorientalisteetgeographedelame |
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