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Acknowledgments | p. xiii |
Introduction | p. xvii |
Orientalism and the Longue Durée | p. 1 |
Individuals, Institutions, Iconoclasms | p. 6 |
The Discrete Charm of Chronology | p. 11 |
Orientalism and the Enlightenment | p. 15 |
Oriental Civilizations in the Enlightenment | p. 21 |
The Peculiarities of German Orientalism | p. 28 |
Herder and Michaelis: The Fate of the Enlightened Old Testament | p. 38 |
Orientalists in a Philhellenic Age | p. 53 |
Friedrich Schlegel: Renaissance and Revelation | p. 58 |
Orientalism and Classicism in the Wake of the Creuzer Streit | p. 66 |
To Be a German Orientalist, 1820-1870 | p. 72 |
The Long Road to Wissenschaftlichkeit | p. 74 |
Classics-Envy and Its Intellectual Consequences | p. 78 |
The Glass Half Empty: Orientalism as a Career | p. 84 |
On Patrons and the Public | p. 95 |
The Lonely Orientalists | p. 102 |
Biedermeier Bible Criticism or How to Study Jews - and Greeks | p. 105 |
The (Even Longer) Road to "Scientific" Judaism | p. 113 |
The Lonely Arabists | p. 118 |
The Indo-Europeanists | p. 123 |
Positivism and the Origins of the Aryan-Semitic Divide | p. 124 |
Fetishizing the Vedas | p. 131 |
Buddha and the Young Hegelian | p. 134 |
Poetic Wisdom's Last Proponent: Friedrich Rückert | p. 138 |
Carl Ritter: Oriental Geography in Western Libraries | p. 141 |
Germans Abroad: Neither Conquerors Nor Friends | p. 143 |
Ferdinand Von Richthofen: An East Asian Encounter | p. 153 |
The Second Oriental Renaissance | p. 157 |
Orientalism as a Career, 1871-1900 | p. 162 |
Three Against the Churches: Paul de Lagarde, Theodor Nöldeke, and Julius Wellhausen | p. 167 |
Paul de Lagarde: The Orientalism of the Future and the Positivism of the Present | p. 168 |
Theodor Nöldeke: Liberal Semitist | p. 174 |
Julius Wellhausen: Hebraism and Realism | p. 178 |
An Islamic Renaissance? | p. 186 |
New Power, New Sources: The Flourishing of Indology in the Era of the Raj | p. 190 |
Beyond the Bible? Assyriology and Egyptology in the High Liberal Age | p. 194 |
Assyriology's Escape from Infancy | p. 196 |
Egyptology for Realists: Adolf Erman | p. 203 |
Eduard Meyer: Universal Historian in a Specialized Age | p. 206 |
The Furor Orientalis | p. 212 |
To Be a (Furious) Orientalist | p. 216 |
Return to Diffusionism, or the Problem of Universalism in a Philological Culture | p. 227 |
Panbabylonism: An Assyiological Revolt and Its Cultural Consequences | p. 236 |
Babel und die Bibel Revisited | p. 244 |
After the "Affair" | p. 249 |
Toward an Oriental Christianity | p. 252 |
Liberal Theology in Crisis | p. 256 |
The Religious-Historical School | p. 259 |
The Oriental Origins of New Testament Christianity | p. 267 |
Buddha versus Jesus; or, Fin de Siècle Christians and the Problem of Parallels | p. 270 |
Persia and Hellenistic Judaism | p. 279 |
Orientalizing Saint Paul | p. 284 |
The Passions and the Races | p. 292 |
On Aryans and Semites | p. 295 |
Paul Deussen, Schopenhauerian Christian | p. 300 |
Popularizing the Aryan Indian: Leopold von Schroeder and Houston Stewart Chamberlian | p. 311 |
Semitistik in the Post-liberal Period | p. 321 |
Ignaz Goldziher: Man between Two Laws | p. 323 |
Orientalism in the Age of Imperialism | p. 333 |
The Culture of German Imperialism | p. 335 |
German Orientalists and the Actuality of Empire | p. 339 |
Colonialism and Its Orientalist Institutions | p. 348 |
Martin Hartmann, Enlightened Arabist | p. 356 |
Carl Becker: Colonialism and Kulturgeschichte | p. 361 |
East Asia's Place in the Sun | p. 367 |
Otto Franke: Orientalism in the Age of "Indirect" Colonialism | p. 377 |
Erwin Baelz: The Orientalism the Kaiserreich Could Not Use | p. 383 |
Interpreting Oriental Art | p. 387 |
Oriental Art and the Ethnographic Museum | p. 393 |
Oriental Carpets and Austrian Art Historians | p. 398 |
Josef Strzygowski: The Art-Historical Furor Orientalis | p. 403 |
Exhibiting the Orient in Munich and Berlin | p. 410 |
The Turfan Expeditions and the Intellectual Consequences of the Central Asian Antiquities Race | p. 416 |
Orientalists and "Others" | p. 427 |
Orientalists and Others, 1900-1918 | p. 429 |
The Orientalists and the Great War | p. 436 |
Declaring Jihad | p. 438 |
Utility, at Last | p. 446 |
Losing the Eastern Propaganda War: Turks, Armenians, and Jews | p. 454 |
Richard Wilhelm, German Mandarin | p. 463 |
Epilogue | p. 474 |
Orientalism's Indian Summer: Weimar Scholarship and Its Discontents | p. 476 |
Orientalism and Nazism | p. 487 |
Why German Orientalists Laid the Foundation for Multicultural Thinking, but Could Not Develop It | p. 495 |
Select Bibliography | p. 499 |
Index | p. 513 |
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