Art, memory, and family in Renaissance Florence
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Art, memory, and family in Renaissance Florence
Cambridge University Press, 2000
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 285-304) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Art, Memory and Family in Renaissance Florence examines the relationship between the production of objects and the production of memory and history in fifteenth-century Florence. Recent studies of Florence by cultural, social, political and economic historians have resulted in a considerable knowledge of family life in this period and the significance of family, kin and locality in the social and political life of the city. Investigating the means and modes of formulating and recording those relationships, the essays gathered together in this study consider the interconnections between society, art and collective memory.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. Memory and its Materials: 1. The historical material of memory Patrick Geary
- 2. Family memory: functions, evolution, recurrences Giovanni Ciappelli
- 3. Family, memory, and history Nicolai Rubinstein
- 4. Poetry as politics and memory in Renaissance Florence and Italy Lauro Martines
- Part II. The Imagery of Memory: 5. Art and the imagery of memory Patricia Lee Rubin
- 6. The memory of faces: representational choices in Florentine portraiture Alison Wright
- 7. Giovanni Benci's patronage of the nunnery, Le Murate Megan Holmes
- 8. Monument and memory in Renaissance Florence Andrew Butterfield
- Part III. Family Identity: 9. Artisan family strategies: proposals for research on the families of Florentine artists Margaret Haines
- 10. Florentine palaces and the memories of the past Brenda Preyer
- 11. Memory of place: Luogo and lineage in the fifteenth-century Florentine countryside Amanda Lillie
- 12. Family values: sculpture and the family in fifteenth-century Florence Geraldine Johnson
- Part IV. The Transmission of Memory: 13. Names, memory, public identity in late Medieval Florence Anthony Molho
- 14. The memory of exiled families: the case of the Strozzi Lorenzo Fabbri
- 15. Memoria and family in law Thomas Kuehn
- 16. Collective amnesia: family memory and the mendicants: a comment Samuel K. Cohn Jr.
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