‘… a concise, erudite, and well-written study … Eva Piirimäe’s study masterfully fulfills the goals it sets itself, namely “to provide a full-bodied and nuanced historical reconstruction” of Herder’s evolving political thought.’
Kirill Ospovat
Source: Monatshefte
‘Eva Piirimäe’s Herder and Enlightenment Politics deserves recognition as a landmark study inthe scholarship of both Johann Gottfried Herder, and of eighteenth century political thought more broadly.’
Andrew Walker
Source: History of European Ideas
‘… a concise, erudite, and well-written study of some of the primary strains of Herder’s thought in their interrelationships, traced through all phases of his evolution, from the 1760s to 1800s. For readers who, like the present reviewer, are not already Herder experts but are interested in Enlightenment intellectual history, the book offers an informative, original, and well-contextualized introduction to Herder’s thought and its place in multiple philosophical and political debates.’
Kirill Ospovat
Source: Monatshefte
‘An excellent contribution to recent Herder scholarship in the English language … a considerable achievement with a great deal of scholarly merit for which the author should be highly commended. It is a valuable contribution to the field that I unhesitatingly recommend not only to those interested in Herder’s political thought, but also to those interested more generally in the intellectual history of patriotism in Europe in the late eighteenth century.’
Vicki A. Spencer
Source: Herder Yearbook
‘A great book, which will, I hope, greatly expand the scholarly appreciation of [Herder’s] thinking in English-speaking circles … with exceptionally deep and broad consideration and contextualization of Herder’s voluminous writings, putting his many essays and arguments into their specific historical, political, and spatial environs, and posing them against the writings of others that he was reading and responding to at specific points in time … I suspect that I will not be alone in therefore finding myself, especially as an English-speaking fan of Herder’s life and ideas, very much in Piirimäe’s debt.’
Russell Arben Fox
Source: The European Legacy