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WHERE IS AMERICA IN THE REPUBLIC OF LETTERS?*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 November 2012
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Where is America in the republic of letters? This question has formed in my mind over the last four years as I have collaborated on a new project based at Stanford University called Mapping the Republic of Letters. The project aims to enrich our understanding of the intellectual networks of major and minor figures in the republic of letters, the international world of learning that spanned the centuries roughly from 1400 to 1800. By creating visual images based on large digitized data sets, we hope to reveal the hidden structures and conditions that nourished the growth of the republic of letters in the early modern era and the causes of its transformation in the nineteenth century. This task has only recently become feasible with the digitization of the correspondences of major intellectuals such as Benjamin Franklin, John Locke, Athanasius Kircher, and Voltaire, and of libraries, cabinets of artifacts, and Grand Tour itineraries.
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Footnotes
Thanks to Charles Capper, Michael O'Brien, Mark Peterson, and James Turner for their incisive comments on earlier versions of this essay. I am also grateful to my colleagues on the Mapping the Republic of Letters project at Stanford University for many productive conversations: Giovanna Ceserani, Nicole Coleman, Dan Edelstein, and Paula Findlen. My graduate students Julia Mansfield, Claire Rydell, and Scott Spillman have also worked tremendously hard on the project, and I remain very appreciative of their labors. Thanks to Giorgio Caviglia of DensityDesign Research Lab in Milan, Italy, for producing the maps of Franklin's and Voltaire's correspondence.
References
1 The term “British America” is problematic since it seems to anticipate the arrival of “Americans”—that is, of the United States—and it promises attention to Canada that I do not give here. The terms “colonial America” and “early America,” however, do not distinguish enough among Britain, France, and Spain's New World empires. So British America it is, for lack of a better term.
2 This is from the website of Cambridge University Press.
3 Lundberg, David and May, Henry F., “The Enlightened Reader in America,” American Quarterly 28 (1976), 262–93CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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5 On the use of the term orbis litterarius see Bots, Hans and Waquet, Françoise, La république des lettres (Paris, 1997), 23, 63–90Google Scholar.
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8 The last twenty years is 1990–2010. Only English-language titles were sampled. For this research I am indebted to Scott Spillman, PhD candidate, Department of History, Stanford University.
9 The Electronic Enlightenment Project, University of Oxford (www.e-enlightenment.com); the Cultures of Knowledge Project, University of Oxford (www.history.ox.ac.uk/cofk); and the Circulation of Knowledge project in the Netherlands (ckcc.huygens.knaw.nl). For a useful introduction to scholarship on spatial mapping in the republic of letters see Mayhew, Robert, “British Geography's Republic of Letters: Mapping an Imagined Community, 1600–1800,” Journal of the History of Ideas 65 (April 2004), 251–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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13 Thanks to Michael O'Brien for his shrewd thoughts on this matter; email communication to the author, 5 November 2010.
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23 Flavell, Julie, When London Was Capital of America (New Haven, 2010), 4, 11, 21Google Scholar.
24 Raven, James, The Business of Books: Booksellers and the English Book Trade, 1450–1830 (New Haven, 2007), 9Google Scholar.
25 Davis, Intellectual Life, 1: 371.
26 See especially Charles Carroll of Carrollton to Charles Carroll of Annapolis, 10 April 1760, in Hoffman, Ronald, ed., Dear Papa, Dear Charley: The Peregrinations of a Revolutionary Aristocrat . . ., 3 vols. (Chapel Hill, 2001), 1: 151–3Google Scholar.
27 Quote from Feld, Stuart, “In the Latest London Manner,” Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 21 (May 1963), 308CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
28 Bridenbaugh, Carl, Cities in the Wilderness: The First Century of Urban Life in America, 1625–1742 (New York, 1938), 303Google Scholar. Contrast this with Spanish America, where by 1740 Mexico City had a population of 112,000 and Lima 52,000; see Elliott, John H., Empires of the Atlantic World: Britain and Spain in America, 1492–1830 (New Haven, 2006), 262, 204Google Scholar.
29 O'Shaughnessy, Empire Divided, 19–27.
30 Fea, John, The Way of Improvement Leads Home: Philip Vickers Fithian and the Rural Enlightenment in Early America (Philadelphia, 2008)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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33 Behrends, Johann Adolf to B. Franklin, 28 Oct. 1778, in Papers of Benjamin Franklin, vol. 27, ed. Lopez, Claude (New Haven, 1988), 656Google Scholar.
34 Benjamin Franklin to Noah Webster, 26 Dec. 1789, available at http://franklinpapers.org/franklin.
35 Woodward, Walter, Prospero's America: John Winthrop, Jr., Alchemy, and the Creation of New England Culture, 1606–1676 (Chapel Hill, 2010), 65Google Scholar.
36 On the estimate of five thousand, I am grateful for the email communication from Walter Woodward, 18 Aug. 2010, who also advises that a number of letters may not have survived. For locations of correspondents see Woodward, Prospero, 3, 54, 65.
37 Bots and Waquet, La republique des lettres, 147.
38 On his languages see Freiberg, Malcolm, ed., Winthrop Papers, vol. 6, 1650–1654 (Boston, MA, 1992)Google Scholar, x. On annotations in Latin see Browne, Charles, “Scientific Notes from the Books and Letters of John Winthrop, Jr. (1606–1676),” Isis 11 (Dec. 1928), 325–42, esp. 327Google Scholar.
39 Woodward, Prospero, 262, 263, 254.
40 Woodward, Prospero, 69.
41 Thanks to the Sébastien Heymann at Gephi (http://gephi.org/) for producing these visualizations for this project.
42 May, Henry, The Enlightenment in America (New York, 1976)Google Scholar; Ferguson, Robert, The American Enlightenment, 1750–1820 (Cambridge, 1994)Google Scholar; Winterer, Caroline, The American Enlightenment: Treasures from the Stanford University Libraries (Stanford, 2011)Google Scholar.
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45 Ibid., 9.
46 Ibid., 15, 25.
47 Ibid., 199, 223.
48 Ibid., 210.
49 Ibid., 223.
50 Winterer, Caroline, The Culture of Classicism: Ancient Greece and Rome in American Intellectual Life, 1780–1910 (Baltimore, 2002), 88Google Scholar.
51 Safier, Measuring the New World, 252.
52 MacCormack, Sabine, On the Wings of Time: Rome, the Incas, Spain, and Peru (Princeton, 2007)Google Scholar.
53 Ibid., 65.
54 Ibid., xvii–xviii.
55 Feingold, Mordechai, “Jesuits: Savants,” idem, ed., Jesuit Science and the Republic of Letters (Cambridge, MA, 2003), 1–45Google Scholar.
56 Harris, Steven, “Confession-Building, Long-Distance Networks and the Organization of Jesuit Science,” Early Science and Medicine 1 (Oct. 1996), 287–318CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Harris, Steven, “Mapping Jesuit Science: The Role of Travel in the Geography of Knowledge,” in O'Malley, Johnet al., eds., The Jesuits: Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, 1540–1773 (Toronto, 1999), 212–40Google Scholar. I am indebted to my colleague Paula Findlen for opportunities to view maps of Kircher's correspondence network.
57 Codignola, Luca, “The Holy See and the Conversion of the Indians in French and British North America, 1486–1750,” in Kupperman, Karen, ed., America in European Consciousness, 1493–1750 (Chapel Hill, 1995) 195–242, 213Google Scholar.
58 Stanwood, Owen, “The Protestant Moment: Antipopery, the Revolution of 1688–1689, and the Making of an Anglo-American Empire,” Journal of British Studies 46 (July 2007), 481–508, esp. 485CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
59 I arrived at the Catholic population figure by adding the number of Catholics (20,000) in Maryland in 1765 to the number on the eve of Revolution in Philadelphia (1,200)—both figures in Walch, Timothy, ed., Early American Catholicism, 1634–1820: Selected Historical Essays (New York, 1988)Google Scholar, unpaginated introduction (3–4). For American population totals in roughly 1775 see Evarts Greene, Harrington, Virginia, et al., American Population before the Federal Census of 1790 (New York, 1932; repr. 1981), 6–7Google Scholar.
60 Dolan, Jay, The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present (Garden City, NY, 1985), 81Google Scholar.
61 Ibid., 82. The first permanent Jesuit institution of higher learning in the United States was Georgetown Academy (later a college), founded in 1789. See Mahoney, Kathleen, Catholic Higher Education in Protestant America: The Jesuits and Harvard in the Age of the University (Baltimore, 2003), 11Google Scholar.
62 Codignola, “Holy See,” 213, quotation at 196.
63 Games, Alison, The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitanism in an Age of Expansion, 1560–1660 (New York, 2008), 9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
64 Ibid., 10.
65 Ibid., 224.
66 Ibid., 230; “scholar-chaplains” at 231.
67 Mungello, David E., The Great Encounter of China and the West (New York, 1999), 37Google Scholar.
68 “Northampton was indeed remote, as far from Boston as Kansas City today”; “The way is long from Oxford to Northampton, as far as from the High Street to Main Street.” Miller, Perry, The New England Mind: From Colony to Province (Cambridge, MA, 1953), 226Google Scholar.
69 Miller, Perry, The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century (Cambridge, MA, 1939), ixGoogle Scholar.
70 Games, Web, 9–10.
71 Ibid., 9.
72 Ibid., 272.
73 See, for example, Jacobs, Margaret, Strangers Nowhere in the World: The Rise of Cosmopolitanism in Early Modern Europe (Philadelphia, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
74 Games, Web, 299.
75 See, for example, Vertovec, Steven and Cohen, Robin, eds., Conceiving Cosmopolitanism: Theory, Context, Practice (Oxford, 2002)Google Scholar.
76 Appiah, Kwame, Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers (New York, 2006), xvGoogle Scholar.
77 Ibid., 140.
78 Kaplan, Catherine O'Donnell, Men of Letters in the Early Republic: Cultivating Forums of Citizenship (Chapel Hill, 2008)Google Scholar.
79 Ibid., 68.
80 Ibid., 2.
81 Ibid., 67.
82 Ibid., 200.
83 Butler, Leslie, Critical Americans: Victorian Intellectuals and Transatlantic Liberal Reform (Chapel Hill, 2007), 168, 170Google Scholar; Stansell, Christine, American Moderns: Bohemian New York and the Creation of a New Century (New York, 2000)Google Scholar.
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