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Akademische und professionelle Bücher  Natural History  Biography, Exploration & Travel

Alexander von Humboldt A Concise Biography

Biography / Memoir New
By: Andreas W Daum(Author), Robert Savage(Translated by)
208 pages, 10 b/w photos and b/w illustrations, 4 b/w maps
NHBS
This admirably concise biography offers a factual and nuanced picture of Humboldt's life and work, and critically interrogates previous portrayals.
Alexander von Humboldt
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  • Alexander von Humboldt ISBN: 9780691247366 Hardback Dec 2024 In stock
    £20.00
    #264336
Price: £20.00
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About this book

An engaging account of the life and work of the legendary polymath Alexander von Humboldt.

In this lucid biography, Andreas Daum offers a succinct and novel interpretation of the life and oeuvre of Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859). A Prussian nobleman born into the age of European Enlightenment, Humboldt was a contemporary of Napoleon, Simon Bolivar, and Charles Darwin. As a naturalist and scholar, he travelled the world, from the Americas to Central Asia, and recorded his observations in multiple volumes. Humboldt is still admired today for his interdisciplinary outreach and ecological awareness.

Moving beyond the conventional views of Humboldt as either an intellectual superhero or a gentleman colonizer, Daum's account presents a novel interpretation. His incisive account focuses on Humboldt in the context of the tumultuous period of history in which he lived. Humboldt embodied the contradictions that marked the age of Atlantic Revolutions. He became a critic of slavery and embraced the emerging civil society but remained close to authoritarian rulers. He dedicated his life to scientific research yet was driven by emotional impulses and pleaded for an aesthetic appreciation of nature. Daum introduces a man passionately striving to establish a "cosmic" understanding of nature while grappling with the era's explosion of knowledge.

This book provides the first concise biography of Humboldt, covering all periods of his life, exploring his personality, the vast range of his works, and his intellectual networks. Daum helps us understand Humboldt as a seminal historical figure and illuminates the role of science at the dawn of the global world.

Customer Reviews (1)

  • A factual and nuanced picture, and a critical interrogation of previous portrayals
    By Leon (NHBS Catalogue Editor) 11 Feb 2025 Written for Hardback


    I read and compared this book to Andrea Wulf's widely-read The Invention of Nature. Historian Andreas W. Daum shows that good things come in small packages and delivers a factual, nuanced, and admirably concise biography. Straight off the bat, you can tell that this will be a different book. At 208 pages and 13 × 21 cm, it is swallowed by Wulf's book. Though both authors are German, as a historian actively researching Humboldt's biography, Daum is just that bit more qualified. Originally published in German, Daum was actively involved in the book's English translation, revising and expanding it in the process.

    A more detailed comparison follows at the end as I first want to judge this book on its merits. Daum discusses Humboldt's life in six chapters, giving equal attention to periods that were less glamorous than his American and Russian expeditions. A short interlude reflects on his scientific approach, while the book ends with a chronology, a very useful narrative guide to sources and further reading, endnotes, and a selected bibliography. Daum has a clear mission statement: to examine Humboldt's life "through a refined biographical lens [that] avoids both mystification and vilification [and] to suggest a more nuanced interpretation, portraying a multifaceted Humboldt" (p. 3). Two aspects stood out to me.

    First, throughout, Daum pushes back on previous portrayals of Humboldt. Wulf's and Meinhardt's book are characterised as "popular, heroic accounts" (p. 162) that portray Humboldt as "a singular intellect way ahead of his time" (p. 2). He adds a clear barb at Wulf's address by writing that Humboldt did not invent nature. He equally objects to postcolonial criticism that casts Humboldt as a gentleman colonizer. Though a necessary corrective, it needs to be combined with a fair assessment of his progressive sides. Portrayals of Humboldt as a second Columbus are similarly scorned as simplistic colonial tropes that are simply not true: "Humboldt was not venturing into unknown territory. Nowhere was he the 'first'" (p. 55). Daum furthermore distinguishes between Humboldtian science and Humboldt's science. Humboldt's call for systematic collection of geomagnetic and climatological data by networks of observatories, later pursued by both Russia and the UK, has been called an example of *Humboldtian* science by historian Susan Faye Cannon. Daum counters that this is a later, idealized archetype that "jettisoned his emphasis on the aesthetic" (p. 124). *Humboldt's* science, in contrast, was far more tentative, trying to balance empirical science with one's subjective experience of nature. He did not have it all figured out before or after his American expedition. To suggest otherwise is "a retrospective projection" (p. 52) that does not do him justice. Finally, though Humboldt is venerated in South America and he welcomed declarations of independence, he played no role in them, nor should be labelled the "father of Latin American independence" (p. 109).

    Second is Daum's nuanced picture of Humboldt. Take, for example, his political stance, or lack thereof. Though remembered for his liberal values and criticism of colonialism and slavery, he feared bloody violence, such as seen during the French Revolution and favoured more gradual reforms. When Prussia took the fight to Napoleon and occupied Paris in 1814, his brother Wilhelm supported the German cause while Alexander refused to, "souring relations between the two" (p. 105). Humboldt helped prevent the Paris Museum of Natural History from being looted and drew criticism back in Germany when lobbying for stolen German artworks to stay in Paris. He supported and found patronage for French and German scientists alike and, by refusing to pick sides, easily moved in different social circles. When he later returned to Berlin with its increasingly conservative political climate that curbed freedom of expression, he swam against the tide by offering free public lectures that became incredibly popular.

    Daum gives a similarly nuanced picture of Humboldt's way of working. Hearing of his grand plans for the American expedition, his brother was already concerned he would overreach. Indeed, he habitually bit off more than he could chew, always had multiple manuscripts on the go, and left a legacy of unfinished projects. Kosmos, the magnum opus he laboured on for the last two decades of his life, was not necessarily a resounding success, despite the high sales. Some contemporaries considered it challenging or requiring too much prior knowledge. Ironically, the proliferation of simplified versions and explainers meant that Humboldt succeeded, sort of, in popularizing science, though it "had taken on a momentum that the author could no longer control" (p. 142). Daum characterizes it as synopsis of material rather than a coherent synthesis, which buttresses his conclusion that Humboldt is remembered not for coming up with "a clearly defined theory that fundamentally changed scientific and social thinking", but for leaving us with "myriad complex thoughts and incentives for further research" (p. 151).

    Given the number of people who will have read Wulf's The Invention of Nature, a comparison is in order. My one-liner is that Daum's book is less fluff, more facts. The book's brevity is partially achieved by omitting all the biographical material on other people that Wulf included and partially by mentioning rather than describing events in lively detail. This is particularly noticeable when it comes to Humboldt's expeditions. Now, before you conclude that Daum's book contains less material than Wulf's, let me stop you there. For all its brevity, there are numerous details here not mentioned by Wulf. Beyond factoids, there are the above-mentioned aspects, attention for his lesser-known works, a more informed opinion on his sexuality, and many other things besides. In a mere 153 pages, Daum concisely offers a full yet nuanced picture of Humboldt's life and work.

    If you have already read The Invention of Nature, should you read this biography? Next to being a quick read, hopefully by now you are convinced Daum's book is worth your time by offering a different perspective and much new information. I found reading them together an instructive and rewarding exercise. If you insist on me recommending just one book, answer me this: do you read history books to be informed or to be entertained? In the former case, choose Daum for a more scholarly take; in the latter, choose Wulf for an entertaining book that indulges in digressions. I hasten to add that I am talking shades of grey here: Daum prioritising the facts does not mean his book is boring, just as Wulf prioritising storytelling does not mean her book is inaccurate.
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Biography

Andreas Daum is professor of history at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo and a recipient of the Humboldt Research Award. He is the author of Kennedy in Berlin, Emigres from Nazi Germany as Historians, and Popularizing Science in the Nineteenth Century (in German), among others.

Biography / Memoir New
By: Andreas W Daum(Author), Robert Savage(Translated by)
208 pages, 10 b/w photos and b/w illustrations, 4 b/w maps
NHBS
This admirably concise biography offers a factual and nuanced picture of Humboldt's life and work, and critically interrogates previous portrayals.
Media reviews

"The key virtue of this biography is its concision, and Daum does an admirable job of sorting through Humboldt's numerous contradictions [...] This gets the job done."
Publishers Weekly

"Andreas Daum has distilled his deep knowledge of Alexander von Humboldt into a short, very readable biography. His nuanced account does full justice to a complex, multifaceted figure. The author elegantly weaves together life and times in a book that is scholarly and engrossing. The different phases of a long life are expertly managed, there is generous direct quotation, and Daum's arguments are both fresh and convincing. I recommend the book highly as the perfect introduction to its complex subject."
– David Blackbourn, author of The Conquest of Nature and Germany in the World: A Global History, 1500–2000

"At the time of his death in 1859, Alexander von Humboldt was a global celebrity as a paragon of scientific travel, a master of several disciplines, and an inveterate intellectual networker across Europe and the Atlantic. Avoiding both hero worship and debunking, Andreas Daum succeeds in capturing the many facets of this paradoxical man. A marvel of concision and readability."
– Jürgen Osterhammel, author of Unfabling the East and The Transformation of the Worl

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"This book offers a well written and accessible account of Alexander von Humboldt's life, times, and significance. Andreas Daum admirably succeeds in offering a beautifully even-handed and well-documented biography of an enduring hero in the natural sciences."
– Nicolaas A. Rupke, Washington and Lee University

"Andreas Daum describes Alexander von Humboldt not only as an ingenious polymath, indefatigable traveler and enlightened philanthropist, but also a representative of his time. This masterly biography is an expanded version of the German original – extraordinarily knowledgeable, based on the latest state of research, elegantly written – and brilliantly translated."
– Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger, author of Maria Theresa: The Habsburg Empress in Her Time

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