Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Remembering and Inventing Enlightenment
- 2 Edinburgh and the Canongate 1660–1750: Communications, Networks, the Routers of Change
- 3 Trades and Professions
- 4 The Arts
- 5 Taverns, Associations and Freemasonry
- 6 Booksellers, Newspapers and Libraries
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Remembering and Inventing Enlightenment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 April 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Remembering and Inventing Enlightenment
- 2 Edinburgh and the Canongate 1660–1750: Communications, Networks, the Routers of Change
- 3 Trades and Professions
- 4 The Arts
- 5 Taverns, Associations and Freemasonry
- 6 Booksellers, Newspapers and Libraries
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Enlightenment is perhaps too often adduced as a cause of change … without ever specifying properly what it was or the mechanics by which it supposedly brought about change.
– Bob Harris and Charles McKean, The Scottish Town in the Age of EnlightenmentEdinburgh was Scotland's biggest city … yet its importance for national society and economy awaits full study
– R. A. HoustonThe Scottish Enlightenment is both a set of institutions and a set of ideas. As such they represent two differing facets of a complex whole … It is bad metaphysics to give one some sort of explanatory priority over the other.
– Christopher J. Berry, The Idea of Commercial Society in the Scottish EnlightenmentBourse, brokers, notaries, price-currents, newsletters and publishers … would not have developed, or would have developed much less vigorously, if the information had been fragmented between several gateways.
– Clé Lesger, The Rise of the Amsterdam Market and Information ExchangeThis is a book about the Scottish Enlightenment. It is also a book about Edinburgh, the chief city of that Enlightenment. There have been many books about the Scottish Enlightenment, and about the role of Edinburgh in it: but this one is different. In the chapters that follow, this book will align the importance of Edinburgh for the national economy and national culture at the end of the seventeenth and the first half of the eighteenth centuries with its centrality as a place for the generation of ideas and innovatory practices. In this introductory chapter and those that follow, I will be primarily examining not the ideas of the Enlightenment nor its chief figures, but the mechanics of Enlightenment. Among the questions that will be asked of the evidence are: ‘What is the (Scottish) Enlightenment?’ ‘How did the Enlightenment happen?’ ‘When did it happen?’ and ‘Why did it happen in Edinburgh?’
What is the (Scottish) Enlightenment ?
The terms ‘Scottish’ and ‘Enlightenment’ have both been frequently challenged over the years by commentators who see them as rhetorical claims rather than real concepts. For some Enlightenment scholars, the ‘Scottish Enlightenment’ is a core brand to be defended: ‘an icon of Scottish self-esteem and identity’, as Bruce Lenman puts it.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Enlightenment in a Smart CityEdinburgh's Civic Development, 1660–1750, pp. 1 - 40Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2018