Ritmennt - 01.01.2001, Qupperneq 144

Ritmennt - 01.01.2001, Qupperneq 144
INGI SIGURÐSSON RITMENNT ment in Iceland was somewhat later than in most other European countries. According to tradition, the Age of Enlightenment in Iceland is regarded as spanning the period from the mid eighteenth century to c. 1830. Certainly there was a significant change after 1830 in that the Icelanders' struggle for increased self-govern- ment began and the prevalent conception of the Danes' rule of Iceland in past centuries changed. But in many ways there was continuity in the attitudes of the Icelanders, inter alia, because of the strong influence of international intellectual currents which are closely connected with the Enlightenment. Some of these connections are more marked from c. 1870 onwards than they were in the period from c. 1830 to c. 1870. It is argued here that when the influence of the En- lightenment in Iceland is estimated it is essen- tial to look beyond c. 1830. The links between the ideology of the Icelanders of the Age of En- lightenment and their ideology in the late nine- teenth century and the early twentieth century are manifold. The connection is very clear as regards the publication of books that were intended for the education of the general public. Emphasis on education in this form is one of the key features of the Enlightenment. To a certain extent the publishing activities of the Icelanders in the Age of Enlightenment were looked upon as a model in the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century. The efforts of the Icelanders in the Age of Enlightenment in this field were spoken approvingly of by Icelanders in the later period. Certain significant Icelandic writers in the Age of Enlightenment emphasized the im- portance of reading societies and libraries for making instructive books available to the gen- eral public. These ideas only became a reality to a limited extent in their time. However, in the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century reading societies and libraries accessible to the general public were founded on a large scale in Iceland, and the ideology behind this activity was very much in the Enlightenment mould. The emphasis on the importance of instructive books can be seen in the prefaces of many works intended for the education of the general public that were published in this period. It is remarkable that even though schools were founded in Iceland on a considerable scale then, the emphasis on publishing books for the instruction of the general public did not become less marked. Ideas of the advance of mankind were not unknown before the Age of Enlightenment, but the emphasis on progress - the idea that progress is possible and that mankind can improve itself - is a key theme in the ideology of the Enlighten- ment and some of the intellectual currents that to a certain extent are derived from it. In the Age of Enlightenment, progress was often used as a yardstick by which developments in history were measured. This is clearly seen in the writ- ings of various Icelanders. The same emphasis on progress is very evident in the writings of Icelanders in the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century. While there is a differ- ent emphasis in the nationalistic views of the Icelanders in the Age of Enlightenment on the one hand and in the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century on the other hand, an emphasis on progress links nationalistic views in the two periods, the influence of Ro- manticism notwithstanding. Fascination with the development of the natural sciences and technology is a basic fea- ture of the Enlightenment, and it is very evident in the writings of Icelanders at the time. Similar views were very prominent in the writings of Icelanders in the later period. The influence of the so-called new or liberal theology, as it was also called, was very notice- able within the Icelandic Lutheran Church in the first few decades of the twentieth century. While this ideology developed in the nineteenth century, especially in Germany, many of its basic features were derived from theology con- nected with the Enlightenment. In various other fields there are clear links between ideology that was prominent among the Icelanders in the Age of the Enlightenment and 140
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