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Embracing a transnational approach to 19th-century Italian intellectual history, this book examines the encounter and amalgamation of local and foreign philosophical traditions, chiefly represented by the thought of Giambattista Vico and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, showcasing their contribution to shaping a historical mindset that guided and legitimised Italians' experiences of political change.
Taking a revisionist stance, the author challenges the prevailing view that Italian thinkers passively adopted foreign ideas. Instead, they engaged critically with them, questioning their conceptual foundations and applicability to Italy's political landscape. Vico, Hegel and the Making of Modern Italy reveals that Italian intellectuals sought cultural and political renewal, at both local and European levels, not through assimilation but through steadfast allegiance to a local strand of political thought inspired by Vico's humanist historicism.
The book ultimately explores how philosophical thought empowered Italian intellectuals to navigate the uncertainties, drama, and energy of the Risorgimento, underscoring the enduring significance of philosophical knowledge in shaping Italy's political trajectory.
Published | Jun 26 2025 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 288 |
ISBN | 9781350522947 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Risorgimento political thought amalgamated the philosophies of Giambattista Vico and of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel to generate radically new notions of time, progress, and history that deeply affected the cultural and political imagination of modern Italy. Alessandro De Arcangelis' book shows how the Italian engagement with Europe's philosophical tradition determined an emerging nation to articulate an idea of itself that was closely related to what Europe perceived as cultural and political progress, without abandoning the roots of its own past. Any future debate on the making of modern Italy among historians, philosophers or political theorists will have to take account of this book.
Axel Körner, Leipzig University, Germany
Italian political thought in the Risorgimento still stands at the margins of general histories of liberalism. By recovering the history of Neapolitan philosophy up to the creation of the Kingdom of Italy, Alessandro de Arcangelis puts the Italian peninsula at the centre of Europe's debates about liberty, the state, and nationality. He does so by showing the extent to which Neapolitan philosophers engaged with Hegel's philosophy imaginatively, and combined it with their own intellectual tradition, to produce a set of highly original reflections. All in all, an important scholarly contribution.
Maurizio Isabella, Professor of Modern History, Queen Mary University of London, UK
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.
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