The Machiavellian moment : Florentine political thought and the Atlantic Republican tradition

Bibliographic Information

The Machiavellian moment : Florentine political thought and the Atlantic Republican tradition

J.G.A. Pocock ; with a new afterword by the author

(Princeton paperbacks)

Princeton University Press, 2003

2nd pbk. ed

Available at  / 35 libraries

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1st pbk. ed.: 1975

Includes bibliographical references (p. 585-600) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Machiavellian Moment is a classic study of the consequences for modern historical and social consciousness of the ideal of the classical republic revived by Machiavelli and other thinkers of Renaissance Italy. J.G.A. Pocock suggests that Machiavelli's prime emphasis was on the moment in which the republic confronts the problem of its own instability in time, and which he calls the "Machiavellian moment." After examining this problem in the thought of Machiavelli, Guicciardini, and Giannotti, Pocock turns to the revival of republican thought in Puritan England and in Revolutionary and Federalist America. He argues that the American Revolution can be considered the last great act of civic humanism of the Renaissance. He relates the origins of modern historicism to the clash between civic, Christian, and commercial values in the thought of the eighteenth century.

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