The Renaissance Rediscovery of Intimacy

This book PDF is perfect for those who love History genre, written by Kathy Eden and published by University of Chicago Press which was released on 06 November 2017 with total hardcover pages 160. You could read this book directly on your devices with pdf, epub and kindle format, check detail and related The Renaissance Rediscovery of Intimacy books below.

The Renaissance Rediscovery of Intimacy
Author : Kathy Eden
File Size : 41,6 Mb
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Language : English
Release Date : 06 November 2017
ISBN : 9780226526645
Pages : 160 pages
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The Renaissance Rediscovery of Intimacy by Kathy Eden Book PDF Summary

In 1345, when Petrarch recovered a lost collection of letters from Cicero to his best friend Atticus, he discovered an intimate Cicero, a man very different from either the well-known orator of the Roman forum or the measured spokesman for the ancient schools of philosophy. It was Petrarch’s encounter with this previously unknown Cicero and his letters that Kathy Eden argues fundamentally changed the way Europeans from the fourteenth through the sixteenth centuries were expected to read and write. The Renaissance Rediscovery of Intimacy explores the way ancient epistolary theory and practice were understood and imitated in the European Renaissance.Eden draws chiefly upon Aristotle, Cicero, and Seneca—but also upon Plato, Demetrius, Quintilian, and many others—to show how the classical genre of the “familiar” letter emerged centuries later in the intimate styles of Petrarch, Erasmus, and Montaigne. Along the way, she reveals how the complex concept of intimacy in the Renaissance—leveraging the legal, affective, and stylistic dimensions of its prehistory in antiquity—pervades the literary production and reception of the period and sets the course for much that is modern in the literature of subsequent centuries. Eden’s important study will interest students and scholars in a number of areas, including classical, Renaissance, and early modern studies; comparative literature; and the history of reading, rhetoric, and writing.

The Renaissance Rediscovery of Intimacy

In 1345, when Petrarch recovered a lost collection of letters from Cicero to his best friend Atticus, he discovered an intimate Cicero, a man very different from either the well-known orator of the Roman forum or the measured spokesman for the ancient schools of philosophy. It was Petrarch’s encounter with

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