The Dacre Lecture (held in association with the History Faculty) - ‘The origins of modern Eurocentrism: erudition, theology, philosophy, and race, 1700-1800’
In 1800, German writers started offering genealogies of modernity running from classical Athens (especially its philosophers), through early Christianity (considered a Greek rather than a Jewish phenomenon, at least in spirit), to modern ‘enlightened’ Protestantism. A century earlier, this genealogy would have been unthinkable. For in 1700, every European intellectual would have agreed that Greek philosophy was not qualitatively different from its ‘oriental’ counterpart, and that Christianity had emerged directly from Judaism.

Combining intellectual and social history, this lecture will provide a new account of how this peculiar Eurocentrism emerged, and why it proved so successful, coming to be deployed in political debates about Jewish emancipation and the abolition of Atlantic slavery. Moreover, it will identify the origins of some long-lasting concepts and ideas: (1) the distinction between ‘Pauline’ and ‘Jewish’ Christianity; (2) the distinction between ‘pre-’ and ‘post-Socratic’ philosophy; (3) a ‘Greek miracle’ in intellectual history; (4) the earliest full conspiracy theory about a Jewish politico-economic plot to take over the world; (5) the first fears of a ‘Great Replacement’ of native Europeans by immigrants. It will suggest that the parallel appearance of these concepts was not unconnected.
Date: 10 May 2024, 17:00 (Friday, 3rd week, Trinity 2024)
Venue: Corpus Christi College, Merton Street OX1 4JF
Venue Details: The Al Jaber Auditorium
Speaker: Dr Dmitri Levitin (Utrecht and All Souls)
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Public
Editor: Laura Spence