Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Benjamin Franklin’s library
- 2 The Art of Virtue
- 3 Franklin’s satiric vein
- 4 Franklin in the republic of letters
- 5 Benjamin Franklin’s natural philosophy
- 6 Franklin and the Enlightenment
- 7 Franklin and the question of religion
- 8 The pragmatist in Franklin
- 9 Franklin on national character and the Great Seal of the United States
- 10 Protestant ethic or conspicuous consumption? Benjamin Franklin and the Gilded Age
- 11 Benjamin Franklin and the American Dream
- 12 Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography, then and now
- Further reading
- Index
4 - Franklin in the republic of letters
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2009
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Benjamin Franklin’s library
- 2 The Art of Virtue
- 3 Franklin’s satiric vein
- 4 Franklin in the republic of letters
- 5 Benjamin Franklin’s natural philosophy
- 6 Franklin and the Enlightenment
- 7 Franklin and the question of religion
- 8 The pragmatist in Franklin
- 9 Franklin on national character and the Great Seal of the United States
- 10 Protestant ethic or conspicuous consumption? Benjamin Franklin and the Gilded Age
- 11 Benjamin Franklin and the American Dream
- 12 Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography, then and now
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
In October 1778, the German physician Johann Adolf Behrends wrote Benjamin Franklin the eighteenth-century equivalent of a fan letter. In Latin, the language of Europe's literati, the doctor confessed to admiring Franklin as a human trinity: “founder of the fatherland, doctor of the human race on the matter of the bodies' electrical energy and illustrious member of the Republic of letters” (P 27: 656). Readers today know Franklin well in his roles as founder and scientist, but his literary personality has been explored differently - as a rhetorician, a humorist, and a print journalist. Franklin's contemporary reputation as a member of the international community of thinkers and writers then known as the “republic of letters” has received less attention, even though his contemporaries hailed Franklin as an important citizen of this border-crossing “republic.” His work enabling the conversation of the artistic and learned and his labors securing the liberty of the international exchange of ideas clearly mattered to Franklin's contemporaries. What, precisely, was the republic of letters? How did Franklin come to loom so large in its affairs?
The name “republic of letters” came into being on the Continent and in England in the later 1600s to designate an imagined community made up of authors and readers who recognized neither national boundaries nor religious affiliations in their quest for the free exchange of ideas, beliefs, and convictions. This community, a republic, not a kingdom, was organized by an implied social contract among equals. Not heritage, nor wealth, nor civil rank affected one's status in the community.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Benjamin Franklin , pp. 50 - 62Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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