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Machiavelli - The First Century
Studies in Enthusiasm, Hostility, and Irrelevance
Sydney Anglo
776 pages
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776
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216x138mm
978-0-19-926776-7
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Hardback
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23 June 2005
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This item is printed to order. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- A new interpretation of the impact of Machiavelli
- An original contribution of high quality
- Penetrating and profound
- Based entirely on primary sources
Between 1513 and 1525 Niccolò Machiavelli wrote a series of works dealing with political, military, and historical matters. One of these (the 'Arte della guerra') was published in 1521, but the rest of his major writings were not published until 1531-2, nearly five years after his death. They continued to be reissued regularly, well into the early seventeenth century. The popularity of Machiavelli's books, the variety of his themes, the different contexts within which he was studied, the range of readers' interests, and the fact that his name entered the vocabulary of every European language - all make his early reception a fruitful field of enquiry. Historians of
ideas have tended to tidy up the past in order to make it comprehensible but Sydney Anglo is concerned with heterogeneity, and with the often irrational and emotional aspects of sixteenth-century thought. Basing his research entirely upon primary sources he quotes extensively in the conviction that, in a battle of words, the words themselves and their tone convey more than summaries of intellectual abstractions.
Authors - hostile, enthusiastic, and indifferent - are closely examined; and many different contexts, political and intellectual, are considered. Sometimes Machiavelli was influential, sometimes not, but in this history of his reception, silences often prove significant. Written in a lively and trenchant style, this new interpretation of the impact of
Machievalli is an original contribution of high quality by a leading expert in the field of Renaissance studies.Readership: Scholars and students of the history of ideas and the Renaissance; literature; government and the state
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Sydney Anglo, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, University of Wales
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"The difficulties of dealing with a subject which is so elusive and complex have not prevented the author from giving us a truly important work, rich in ideas, and with a bibliographic framework of remarkable breadth and accuracy, which encompasses the whole European perspective ..." - Michaela Valente, Bruniana & Campanelliana Anno XII "Anglo succeeds in bringing order to a period of European thought which selects as its spokesman, both positive and negative, Machiavelli." - Michaela Valente, Bruniana & Campanelliana Anno XII "Sydney Anglo, with his customary verve, humour, scholarship, and stamina, takes the reader in search of Machiavelli ... A vivid and thorough summary of the various ways in which
Machiavelli was read..." - Diego Zancani, TLS "Machiavelli - The First Century is [also] a celebration of the greatness of one individual who not only got his own century talking, but the following ones as well." - Diego Zancani, TLS "The weightiest treatment yet to appear in English of the reception of Machiavelli's works" - The English Historical Review "Anglo has written a profoundly learned and complex book, but one that provides a hugely impressive argument for the difficulty, as well as the importance, of doing the history of ideas properly and explaining Machiavelli's legacy effectively." - Political Studies "Sydney Anglo raises the whole question of Machiavelli and his
'influence' to a totally new level. His arguments are powerful and persuasive." - Keith Thomas "The first feeling one has when approaching this big book is...one of great admiration" - Marco Formisano, Renaissance Studies "This is a very impressive book." - N.W. Bawcutt, Modern Language Review, 102.1
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Introduction: Problems Regarding Method
I. Early Readership
1.: The Earliest Readers of Machiavelli: Miscellaneous and Military
2.: Creative Plagiarism: Agostino Nifo's De regnandi peritia
3.: Early Readers of Machiavelli: Comment and Discourse
4.: A Hostile Cardinal: Reginald Pole and his Apologia
5.: Osorio and Machiavelli: From Open Hostility to Covert Approbation
6.: Machiavelli and the Index of Prohibited Books
7.: Machiavelli's Keenest Readers: The Early Translators
II. The Rhetoric of Hate
8.: In Praise of the Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre
9.: Innocent Gentillet and Machiavelli's 'Maximes tyranniques'
10.: In the Wake of Gentillet: Evolution of the 'Machiavel' Stereotype in France and England
11.: More Machiavellian than Machiavel: The Jesuits and the Context of Donne's Conclave
III. Adaptation, Attack, Defence
12.: Gentillet's Final Assault: The 'Contre-Machiavel' of 1585
13.: From Sublime to Ridiculous: Some Serious Readers of Machiavelli
14.: Writers on the Art of War
IV. Machiavelli and Non-Machiavelli
15.: Paradoxes on the Reception of Machiavelli's Military Thinking
16.: Systematic Immorality: The Courtier's Art
17.: Systematic Fragmentation: The Vogue of the Political Aphorism
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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