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Ape to Apollo

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Ape to Apollo

Contributors:

By (Author) David Bindman

ISBN:

9781861891402

Publisher:

Reaktion Books

Imprint:

Reaktion Books

Publication Date:

2nd September 2002

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

The arts: general topics
Ethnic studies

Dewey:

700.455

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

264

Dimensions:

Width 155mm, Height 209mm

Description

"Race" was essentially a construction of the 18th century, a means by which the Enlightenment could impose rational order on human variety. In this book, David Bindman argues that ideas of beauty were from the beginning inseparable from race, as Europeans judged the civility and aesthetic capacity of other races by their appearance. These judgements were combined with a conflict between those who wished to order humanity into separate races, and those who believed in a common humanity whose differences were due to climatic and geographical variations. Central to this debate was the work of Carolus Linnaeus and the Comte de Buffon, but it was also driven by the writings of the German art historian Johann Winckelmann, who argued for the supremacy of the ancient Greeks, the Swiss physiognomist Johann Caspar Lavater, who believed that moral character could be deduced from the study of a person's face, and by two scientists - the father and son Reinhold and Georg Forster - who had been on Captain Cook's second voyage to the South Seas in 1772-5. During this time the philosopher Immanuel Kant attempted the first modern definition of race, a definition which was challenged by Georg Forster and the philosopher Johann Gottfried von Herder, sparking a lively but astonishingly little-known controversy that went on through the next decade and beyond. The 1770s also saw the beginnings of a more scientific yet also profoundly aesthetic approach to race in the work of Johan Friedrich Blumenbach and Pieter Camper, whose notorious classification of skulls was, despite their own liberalism, to become the basis of 19th-century "racial science". "Ape to Apollo" provides a refreshing and original view of a highly contentious subject. It should be valuable reading for anyone seeking the origins of today's controversies over race and ideas of beauty.

Reviews

a valuable survey of a complex and extremely sensitive subject Times Literary Supplement This is by no means just a contribution to the history of art, but deserves to reach a much wider readership Apollo

Author Bio

David Bindman is Professor of History of Art at University College London. He is the author of books on 18th-century sculpture, the French Revolution, Hogarth and William Blake.

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