A Short History of the Italian Renaissance
A Short History of the Italian Renaissance
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Author(s): Cox, Virginia
ISBN No.: 9781784530778
Pages: 272
Year: 201510
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 137.26
Status: Out Of Print

"This is a short and pithy book by an outstanding scholar at the top of her game. Prioritizing literature, it uses newly-discovered or unfamiliar writings to re-describe social classes, as well as topics like individualism and gender. Its innovative chapters on "Renaissance Man" and especially "Renaissance Woman" help to reset the agenda for understanding the Italian Renaissance, making this book an invaluable twenty-first-century guide, not only for students but for the rest of us as well." -- Alison Brown, Emerita Professor of Italian Renaissance History, Royal Holloway, University of London, author of The Renaissance "Virginia Cox's short history of the Italian Renaissance is an exemplary introduction: concise, lucid, elegant, balanced, perceptive and accessible. It summarizes traditional views of the Renaissance, especially Jacob Burckhardt's, criticizes them, and offers a revised interpretation of the movement. Cox's Renaissance is, in her own words, "broader and deeper" than its predecessors. She places more emphasis than usual on the coexistence and conflict between different ideas and styles. She re-interprets Burckhardt's idea of Renaissance "individualism" with the aid of recent work on social psychology.


Her book includes discussions of the applied arts, notably fashion, as well as a chapter on "the Renaissance woman", based on the author's own research. Students will be grateful for this book, general readers will enjoy it, and fellow-scholars will be appreciative of the knowledge and thought underlying its apparently effortless production." -- Peter Burke, FBA, Emeritus Professor of Cultural History, University of Cambridge, author of The Italian Renaissance "Virginia Cox's rich, thought-provoking and elegantly written introduction to the Italian Renaissance conceives the cultural movement widely and inclusively, and encourages us to see it in new ways. Cox shows how it was rooted in an emulative and endlessly inventive dialogue with the models of ancient Rome and Greece that responded to, and was made more urgent by, the new needs of expanding cities and commerce. The cultural production that she considers includes of course literature, fine art, music and thought, but also material culture (including cooking and fashion), geography and science. Cox argues convincingly that the Renaissance in Italy should be seen as lasting until as late as the start of the seventeenth century, and as multipolar, with important developments emerging as much from princely courts as from the republics of Florence and Venice. Her approach enables her to go beyond the cultures of the social elites to study those of the literate urban classes in general. Perhaps most strikingly, she can devote equal space to Renaissance man merchants, courtiers and artists in a broad sense and to Renaissance woman, the secular and religious figures whose engagement with culture flourished most fully towards the end of the period.


This finely judged book achieves much more than one might expect from a short history. It should be read and pondered by anyone interested in the Italian Renaissance, whether they are experienced scholars, students or non-specialists." -- Brian Richardson, Emeritus Professor of Italian Language, University of Leeds, author of Manuscript Culture in Renaissance Italy.


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