CALL FOR PAPERS
FRIEDRICH MAX MUELLER AND THE ROLE OF PHILOLOGY IN VICTORIAN THOUGHT
An International Conference at the German Historical Institute,
London, 16-18 April 2015
Collaborating institutions:
Centre for Anglo-German Cultural Relations, Queen Mary University of London
English Goethe Society
German Historical Institute, London
DESCRIPTION:
Friedrich Max Mueller (1823-1900) was one of the most well known
academics in Victorian Britain. His popular writings enjoyed a wide
readership and acclaim. His public lectures were sell-out events. He
was a prominent figure in the popularisation of evolutionary thinking
before Darwin. His theories regarding the origins and development of
language served to create a public fascination with the past, with
legend and with myth. His public role in the contexts of imperialism
and British understanding of the cultures of the Indian subcontinent
brought him notoriety. Good-looking, witty and gifted, Max Mueller
was, for many outside academe, the embodiment of the German Professor
and a forerunner of today?s media-savvy academic.
Max Mueller?s scholarship is often seen as an important contribution
to Victorian knowledge. When studied today, Max Mueller?s works offer
remarkable insights into the preoccupations and parameters of
Victorian intellectual life. His translation of ancient Sanskrit
scripts was inherently ground-breaking and monumental. His work was
absorbed not just by academics but also by an influential
cross-section of the Victorian elite. His findings helped raise the
profile of so-called ?Oriental? cultures in Britain, as well as
inspiring interest in philology, a discipline that enjoyed a peculiar
popularity and strategic position in Victorian Britain. Max Mueller?s
contribution to the development of philology intellectually and
through personal intervention was significant. Yet his influence can
only be understood through an interdisciplinary lens. Philology
intersected with theology and with the academic study of religion, key
areas of sensitive importance in Victorian Britain. It also overlapped
with literary scholarship, philosophy, anthropology, and evolutionary
thinking in the natural sciences. The first President of the English
Goethe Society, Max Mueller actively fostered interdisciplinary
discourse. Seen broadly, his scholarship made an important
contribution to the dissemination of German-style historicism in
Victorian intellectual life.
Historically, Max Mueller?s personal life is highly significant.
Through his father, the Romantic poet Wilhelm Mueller, and through his
studies Max Mueller was on personal terms with the leading German
intellectuals of the time. Identified by the Prussian Ambassador,
Bunsen, as an important catalyst of intellectual exchange, Max Mueller
came to occupy a position of significance in Anglo-German cultural
relations and Victorian life in general, even if his position as a
German-born Professor at Oxford carried with it challenges of
integration and cultural acceptance. He corresponded widely with
prominent and important figures, including Charles Darwin and William
Gladstone, and became a favourite guest of Queen Victoria. He was
related by marriage to both J.A. Froude and Charles Kingsley. His
scholarship and public engagement in imperial matters extended his
impact abroad. His high profile campaigning for better understanding
of Indian culture in Europe has left its mark: Goethe Institutes in
India today are known as ?Max Mueller Bhavan.?
Despite being credited with significance in many fields of Victorian
intellectual and public life, Max Mueller?s life and work have not
been subjected to sufficient scholarly attention. The relatively
recent biography by Lourens P. van den Bosch (Friedrich Max Mueller: A
Life Devoted to the Humanities, 2002) has provided an excellent
overview that should now enable more detailed evaluations of Max
Mueller?s contributions to many facets of intellectual life. By
necessity, such evaluations must be biographical, historical and
interdisciplinary. The proposed conference will therefore bring
together academics from a range of disciplines. It seeks to recapture,
and evaluate comprehensively and rigorously, Friedrich Max Mueller?s
significance personally, intellectually, and publicly.
CONFERENCE PANELS:
Contributions are sought relating to the following provisional panel themes:
*Introduction*
Biography; political and intellectual context; research questions;
*Philology*
Max Mueller?s position within philology; Max Mueller and philology as
a discipline in Britain in the nineteenth century;
*Religion*
Max Mueller?s religious position; his influence upon Victorian
religious discourse and his founding of religious studies as an
academic discipline in the United Kingdom;
*Evolution*
Max Mueller and nineteenth-century thinking on evolution; Max Mueller
and Darwin;
*Anthropology*
Max Mueller?s influence upon nineteenth-century anthropology;
*Myths*
Max Mueller?s influence on the theory of myth;
*Translation and Sanskrit Studies*
Max Mueller and the craft of the translator; Max Müller?s impact on
Sanskrit research in Britain and internationally;
*Imperialism*
Max Mueller?s engagement with British imperialism and imperial policy;
Max Mueller and the history of British imperialism in India; Max
Mueller in relation to current debates about imperialism,
intercultural relations and interreligious dialogue.
DISSEMINATION:
The conference proceedings will be considered for publication in a
special issue of the journal of the English Goethe Society
(Publications of the English Goethe Society).
CONVENORS:
John R. Davis (Kingston University), Email: [log in to unmask]
Angus Nicholls (Queen Mary University of London), Email:
[log in to unmask]
Abstracts of 500 words should be sent to either of the conference
convenors by 30 April 2014.
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The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number SC005336.
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