Popular politics in an aristocratic republic : political conflict and social contestation in late Medieval and early modern Venice
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Bibliographic Information
Popular politics in an aristocratic republic : political conflict and social contestation in late Medieval and early modern Venice
(The body in the city)
Routledge, 2020
- : hbk
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
Popular Politics in an Aristocratic Republic explores the different aspects of political actions and experiences in late medieval and early modern Venice.
The book challenges the idea that the city of Venice knew no political conflict and social contestation during the medieval and early modern periods. By examining popular politics in Venice as a range of acts of contestation and of constructive popular political participation, it contributes to the broader debate about premodern politics. The volume begins in the late fourteenth century, when the demographical and social changes resulting from the Black Death facilitated popular challenges to the ruling class's power, and finishes in the late eighteenth century, when the French invasion brought an end to the Venetian Republic. It innovates Venetian studies by considering how ordinary Venetians were involved in politics, and how popular politics and contestation manifested themselves in this densely populated and diverse city. Together the chapters propose a more nuanced notion of political interactions and highlight the role that ordinary people played in shaping the city's political configuration, as well as how the authorities monitored and punished contestation.
Popular Politics in an Aristocratic Republic combines recent historiographical approaches to classic themes from political, social, economic, and religious Venetian history with contributions on gender, migration, and urban space. The volume will be essential reading for students of Venetian history, medieval and early modern Italy and Europe, political and social history.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. Popular protest and alternative visions of the Venetian polity, c.1260 to 1423
- Chapter 2. Memorializing conspiracy and unrest. Venetian historical writing at the turn of the sixteenth century
- Chapter 3. Political participation and ordinary politicization in Renaissance Venice. Was the popolo a political actor?
- Chapter 4. Popular heresies and dreams of political transformation in sixteenth-century Venice
- Chapter 5. Spaces of unrest? Policing hospitality sites in early modern Venice
- Chapter 6. Protest in the Piazza: contested space in early modern Venice
- Chapter 7. Female agency, subjectivity, and disorder in early modern Venice
- Chapter 8. Tensions and compromises in the republican system of justice in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Venice
- Chapter 9. Boatmen, fishermen, and Venetian institutions: from negotiation to confrontation
- Chapter 10. Conflicts, social unease, and protests in the world of the Venetian guilds (sixteenth to eighteenth century)
- Afterword
- Index
by "Nielsen BookData"