2014
DOI: 10.1017/s0009640714000596
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Transatlantic Textbooks: Karl Hagenbach, Shared Interests, and German Academic Theology in Nineteenth-Century America

Abstract: The rise of German academic institutions in the nineteenth century considerably altered the landscape of American higher education. American students of theology looked to Germany to develop their discipline, where they found model textbooks that gave directives in learning and piety, transforming academic and theological practice. With sensitivity to the history of the book and the history of the rich cultural traffic across the Atlantic, this article focuses on the reception in English translation of the imp… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…40 RELIGION, REVOLUTION, AND THE DANGERS modern scientific consciousness. 43 The two had joined Basel's theological faculty in the early 1820s. While the conservative and pietist reactions against de Wette came in spurts, their fevered pitch was present already from the beginning and continued in the early 1830s.…”
Section: Church Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…40 RELIGION, REVOLUTION, AND THE DANGERS modern scientific consciousness. 43 The two had joined Basel's theological faculty in the early 1820s. While the conservative and pietist reactions against de Wette came in spurts, their fevered pitch was present already from the beginning and continued in the early 1830s.…”
Section: Church Historymentioning
confidence: 99%