TY - JOUR
T1 - Untranslatable
T2 - Gottfried Kinkel, ‘Kulturgeschichte’ and British Art Historiography
AU - Hönes, Hans
N1 - I would like to thank Geraldine Johnson, Oxford, and Aris Sarafianos, Ioannina, as well as the anonymous reviewers, for their valuable comments.
PY - 2021/6/17
Y1 - 2021/6/17
N2 - In 1934, Edgar Wind claimed there was no English equivalent for the word “kulturwissenschaftlich” and the method it denoted: it was untranslatable. Although German art history had been widely read in England since Victorian times, certain methods, as well as the discipline itself, were only hesitantly received. This article focuses on a decisive moment in this entangled history—an attempt to establish in Britain both art history as an academic discipline and a cultural-historical approach to the subject. The key figure is the dashing art historian Gottfried Kinkel, a close friend of Jacob Burckhardt (and archenemy of Karl Marx), who fled Germany after the 1848 revolution. In 1853, he gave the firstever university lecture in art history in England, the manuscripts of which were recently discovered. Kinkel’s case is a prime example of both a socio-historical approach to art history in Victorian times and an exile’s only partially successful attempt to transmit his methodology to a new audience.
AB - In 1934, Edgar Wind claimed there was no English equivalent for the word “kulturwissenschaftlich” and the method it denoted: it was untranslatable. Although German art history had been widely read in England since Victorian times, certain methods, as well as the discipline itself, were only hesitantly received. This article focuses on a decisive moment in this entangled history—an attempt to establish in Britain both art history as an academic discipline and a cultural-historical approach to the subject. The key figure is the dashing art historian Gottfried Kinkel, a close friend of Jacob Burckhardt (and archenemy of Karl Marx), who fled Germany after the 1848 revolution. In 1853, he gave the firstever university lecture in art history in England, the manuscripts of which were recently discovered. Kinkel’s case is a prime example of both a socio-historical approach to art history in Victorian times and an exile’s only partially successful attempt to transmit his methodology to a new audience.
U2 - 10.1515/ZKG-2021-2005
DO - 10.1515/ZKG-2021-2005
M3 - Article
VL - 84
SP - 248
EP - 268
JO - Zeitschrift fuer Kunstgeschichte
JF - Zeitschrift fuer Kunstgeschichte
IS - 2
ER -