The modern enterprise of anthropology, with all of its important implications for cross-cultural perceptions, perspectives, and self-consciousness emerged from the eighteenth-century intellectual context of the Enlightenment. If the Renaissance discovered perspective in art, it was the Enlightenment that articulated and explored the problem of perspective in viewing history, culture, and society. If the Renaissance was the age of oceanic discoverymost dramatically the discovery of the New World of Americathe critical reflections of the Enlightenment brought about an intellectual rediscovery of the New World and thus laid the foundations for modern anthropology. The contributions that constitute this book present the multiple anthropological facets of the Enlightenment, and suggest that the character of its intellectual engagementsacknowledging global diversity, interpreting human societies, and bridging cultural differencemust be understood as a whole to be fundamentally anthropological. Editors Wolff and Cipolloni offer a fascinating collection of contemporary, interdisciplinary, and international perspectives on the 'subject' and 'other' dynamic and its role in the formation of European intellectual history and historiography Wolff gives and in-depth intellectual history of anthropology; Cipolloni concludes with a marvelous discussion of protoanthropology and Euro-American encounters This is an astonishing roundtable of 'worlds' and 'words.' Larry Wolff is Professor of History at New York University. His books includeInventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the Enlightenment(Stanford, 1994), andVenice and the Slavs: The Discovery of Dalmatia in the Age of Enlightenment(Stanford, 2001).Marco Cipolloni is Professor and Chair of Spanish Language and Culture at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. His works includeIl sovrano e la corte nelle cartas della Conquista(1991),Tra memoria apostolica e racconto pl3‰