1st Edition

Friedrich Max Müller and the Role of Philology in Victorian Thought

Edited By John R. Davis, Angus Nicholls Copyright 2018
    180 Pages
    by Routledge

    180 Pages
    by Routledge

    The German comparative philologist Friedrich Max Müller (1823-1900) was one of the most influential scholars in Victorian Britain. Müller travelled to Britain in 1846 in order to prepare a translation of the Rig Veda. This research visit would turn into a lifelong stay after Müller was appointed as Taylor Professor of Modern Languages at Oxford in 1854. Müller’s activities in this position would exert a profound influence on British intellectual life during the second half of the nineteenth-century: his book-length essay on Comparative Mythology (1856) inspired evolutionist thinkers such as Herbert Spencer and Edward Burnett Tylor and made philology into one of the master sciences at mid-century; his debates with Charles Darwin and his followers on the origin of language constituted a significant component of religiously informed reactions to Darwin’s ideas about human descent; his arguments concerning the interdependence of language and thought influenced fields such as psychology, neurology, paediatrics and education until the end of the nineteenth century; his theories concerning an ‘Aryan’ language that purportedly predated Sanskrit and ancient Greek led to controversial debates on the relations between language, religion and race in the Indian subcontinent and beyond; and his monumental 50-volume edition of the Sacred Books of the East helped to lay the foundations for the study of comparative religion. Müller’s interlocutors and readers included people as various as Alexander von Humboldt, Darwin, George Eliot, Matthew Arnold, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ferdinand de Saussure, Ernst Cassirer, Mohandas K. Gandhi and Jarwaharlal Nehru.

    This volume offers the most comprehensive and interdisciplinary assessment of Müller's career to date. Arising from a conference held at the German Historical Institute in London in 2015, it brings together papers by an international group of experts in German studies, German and British history, linguistics, philosophy, English literary studies, and religious studies in order to examine the many facets of Müller’s scholarship. This book was originally published as a special issue of the Publications of the English Goethe Society.

    Introduction – Friedrich Max Müller: The Career and Intellectual Trajectory of a German Philologist in Victorian Britain John R. Davis and Angus Nicholls

    Part I: Friedrich Max Müller on Language, Metaphor, Religion and Myth

    1. ‘Language is our Rubicon’: Friedrich Max Müller’s Quarrel with Hensleigh Wedgwood Michela Piattelli

    2. The Victorian Question of the Relation between Language and Thought Marjorie Lorch and Paula Hellal

    3. Friedrich Max Müller’s Cultural Concept of Metaphor Andreas Musolff

    4. Friedrich Max Müller on Religion and Myth Robert A. Segal

    5. Comparative Mythology as a Transnational Enterprise: Friedrich Max Müller’s Scholarly Identity through the Lens of Angelo De Gubernatis’s Correspondence Pascale Rabault-Feuerhahn

    Part II: Max Müller and Religious Studies – Contribution and Reception

    6. Forgotten Bibles: Friedrich Max Müller’s Edition of the Sacred Books of the East Arie L. Molendijk

    7. Parallel Lives: Friedrich Max Müller and William Wright Bernhard Maier

    8. ‘Vedāntist of Vedāntists’? The Problem of Friedrich Max Müller’s Religious Identity Thomas J. Green

    9. Friedrich Max Müller and George Eliot: Affinities, Einfühlung, and the Science of Religion Sarah Barnette

    10. ‘A reformed Buddhism […] would help in the distant future to bring about a mutual understanding’: Friedrich Max Müller’s Conceptions of Religious Reform, Ecumenical Dialogue and World Peace Laurent Dedryvère and Stéphanie Prévost

    11. Friedrich Max Müller and the Emergence of Identity Politics in India and Germany Baijayanti Roy

    Biography

    John R. Davis is Professor of History and International Relations at Kingston University, UK. His research covers Anglo-German relations and British and German history.

    Angus Nicholls is Reader in German and Comparative Literature at Queen Mary, University of London, UK. He is co-editor of the Publications of the English Goethe Society and of History of the Human Sciences.

    "Their volume clearly demonstrates that the investigation of the subject in this century is far from being exhausted." - Haruko Momma, New York University