The Persistence of the Pedant

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This chapter examines how the figure of the pedant persisted as a caricature of the intellectual in premodern Europe. It traces its beginnings as a stock character in Italian comedy and subsequently analyzes three mechanisms that facilitated its continued use in changing intellectual contexts: its literary versatility as a comic stock character, sustained theoretical reflection on the concepts of pedant and pedantry (here analyzed in the cases of Michel de Montaigne and Ulrik Huber), and the practice of semantic linking. Moving from mechanisms to motives, the chapter concludes by considering two functions of the type, as an instrument of social control and a polemical device within scholarly circles.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationBrill's Studies in Intellectual History
Subtitle of host publicationTowards a Long-Term History of Scholarly Vices
EditorsSjang ten Hage, Herman Paul
Place of PublicationLeiden
PublisherBrill
Pages149-173
Number of pages25
ISBN (Electronic)978-90-04-72505-8
ISBN (Print)978-90-04-72504-1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2026

Publication series

NameBrill's Studies in Intellectual History
Volume362
ISSN (Print)0920-8607
ISSN (Electronic)2214-2517

Keywords

  • pedantry
  • epistemic vice
  • Renaissance humanism
  • History of education
  • Michel de Montaigne
  • Ulrik Huber

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