DREADFUL ENEMIES: THE "BEAST," THE HYENA, AND NATURAL HISTORY IN THE ENLIGHTENMENT
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Band 13, Heft 1, S. 33-61
Abstract
The hypothesis that the beast of the Gévaudan (an intriguingly mysterious killer that roamed southern France in the 1760s) might be an African hyena was not simply a popular and amusing misconception; it reflected an important dimension of the critical spirit driving eighteenth-century science. By historicizing natural discovery and its motivations, this essay uncovers aspects of Enlightenment natural history—namely an attraction to the unknowable and a desire for uncertainty, both reflected in the fascination with the sublime—that only became more marked as the frontiers of knowledge receded. In doing so, the essay shows the distinctively hybrid character of an Enlightenment mentality that savored both illumination and darkness.
Problem melden