The Renaissance in Europe: A Reader

封面
Keith Whitlock
Yale University Press, 2000年1月1日 - 374 頁
How important was the Renaissance in the development of Western civilization? To what extent did the Renaissance mediate or challenge tradition and notions of authority? What factors determined the reception of Renaissance culture in particular areas and particular disciplines? This stimulating book is a collection of seminal readings by eminent scholars who explore aspects of the Renaissance from various perspectives, assessing current knowledge and expounding their own views.

The authors address the themes of humanism, structures of authority, and levels of culture among different social orders and between men and women. And they support or query ideas expressed in Jacob Burckhardt's classic 1860 study of the Renaissance, speculating in particular on what his "discovery of the individual" really meant for the construction of self in the late medieval/early modern context. This collection is an essential reference for any student of the Renaissance.

 

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內容

Introduction
1
The Impact of Humanism
3
Courts Patrons and Poets
113
Challenges to Authority
211
Index
364
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關於作者 (2000)

Keith Whitlock is staff tutor in arts at the Open University.

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