Howard Hotson is professor of early modern intellectual history, University of Oxford, and steering committee chair of the Council for the Defence of British Universities.
“The challenge of harvesting and analysing the large quantities of data needed to document shifting patterns of intellectual activity has drawn me into the challenge of applying digital technology to historical research.”
My most longstanding strand of research concerns the intellectual history of central Europe and the international Reformed world c.1550-1660. At the heart of these interests is a subject missing almost entirely from standard histories: the gradually expanding reform movements of the post-Reformation period culminating in the pansophism of Comenius, the universal reform programme of Samuel Hartlib, and the audacious philosophical projects of Leibniz. This subject has drawn me into a number of related topics, including educational reform, ecclesiastical irenicism, political theory, millenarianism, and the search for a new philosophy.
Rooting these developments in the politically and confessionally fragmented context of the Holy Roman Empire has stimulated an interest in what I call intellectual geography. This approach, implicit in much of my earlier work, is more explicit in the monograph, The Reformation of Common Learning: Post-Ramist-Method and the Reception of the New Philosophy, 1618-c. 1670, forthcoming from the OUP in 2020.
The challenge of harvesting and analysing the large quantities of data needed to document shifting patterns of intellectual activity has drawn me into the challenge of applying digital technology to historical research. Since 2009 I have directed the project known as Cultures of Knowledge: Networking the Republic of Letters, 1550-1750, which has experimented with creating the conditions in which scholars, projects, repositories, and publishers collaborate in populating a digital union catalogue of early modern correspondence, Early Modern Letters Online.
In order to negotiate still more advanced ‘digital framework for multi-lateral collaboration on Europe’s intellectual history’, I chaired a COST network entitled Reassembling the Republic of Letters, 1500-1800, the results of which were published in an open-access book in 2019. I am currently Principal Investigator on a three-year project funded by the AHRC, entitled Networking Archives, which is experimenting with the application of quantitative network analysis to large quantities of correspondence data and metadata. I am also one of the architects of the Cabinet project in Oxford, which is developing digital infrastructure for teaching with objects and images.
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