Power and imagination : city-states in Renaissance Italy

書誌事項

Power and imagination : city-states in Renaissance Italy

by Lauro Martines

Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988

Johns Hopkins paperbacks ed

  • :pbk

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注記

Bibliography: p. 345-356

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In Power and Imagination, a noted historian rethinks the evolution of the city-state in Renaissance Italy and recasts the conventional distinction between "society" and "culture." Martines traces the growth of commerce and the evolution of governments; he describes the attitudes, pleasures, and rituals of the ruling elite; and he seeks to understand the period's towering works of the imagination in literature, painting, city planning, and philosophy-not simply as the creations of individual artists, but as the forman expression of the ambitions and egos of those in power.

目次

Preface to The Johns Hopkins Edition Preface Acknowledgements Part I: The Ascent of Communes Chapter 1. Background Chapter 2. Communes Emerge Part II: The Early Commune and its Nobility Chapter 3. Communes and Empire Chapter 4. Consular Institutions Chapter 5. The Nobility Part III: The Commune Around 1200 Chapter 6. Urban Crisis and Neighborhood Context Chapter 7. Podestaral Government Part IV: Popolo and Popular Commune Chapter 8. The Divisive Issues Chapter 9. Popular Organization Chapter 10. Discipline and Takeover Chapter 11. The Changing Popolo Part V: The End of the Popular Commune Chapter 12. Achievement Chapter 13. Failure Part VI: The Course of Urban Values Chapter 14. Urban Space and Personality Chapter 15. Florins: The Best of Kin Chapter 16. Experience and Religious Feeling: An Anonymous Moralist Part VII: Despotism: Signories Chapter 17. The Seizures of Power Chapter 18. Signorial Government Part VIII: The Course of Political Feeling Chapter 19. The Matrix: Local Feeling Chapter 20. The Example of Brunetto Latini Chapter 21. The Vanguard of Feeling Part IX: Oligarchy: Renaissance Republics Chapter 22. The Republican Environment Chapter 23. The Lessons of the Ambrosian Republic Chapter 24. The Workings of Oligarchy Part X: Economic Trends and Attitudes Chapter 25. The Land Chapter 26. Population and Trade Chapter 27. Public Finance Chapter 28. A Unity of Attitudes Part XI: Humanism: A Program for Ruling Classes Chapter 29. The Program Chapter 30. The Origins of Humanism Chapter 31. The Problem of Objectivity Chapter 32. Class and Group Conscience Chapter 33. Ideological Themes Part XII: The Princely Courts Chapter 34. Perimeters Chapter 35. The Courtly Establishment Chapter 36. A Paradise for Structuralists Part XIII: Art: An Alliance with Power Chapter 37. Patronage and Propaganda Chapter 38. Social Positions and Mobility Chapter 39. Social Identity into Artistic Style Chapter 40. Manner and Style Chapter 41. Space Real and Imaginary Part XIV: Invasion: City-States in Lighting and Twilight Chapter 42. The Main Line of Events Chapter 43. The Main Line of Failure Part XV: The High Renaissance: A Divided Consciousness Chapter 44. The Key Experience: Contradiction Chapter 45. Patronage in Danger Chapter 46. Religion and Leadership Chapter 47. Political Thinking: Man Against Unreason Chapter 48. The Language Question Chapter 49. The Lure of Utopia Part XVI: The End of the Renaissance Notes Bibliography Supplementary Bibliography Index

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