History of the Florentine People: Books 9-12 ; Memoirs

History of the Florentine People: Books 9-12 ; Memoirs
Author: Leonardo Bruni
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 524
Release: 2001
Genre: Florence (Italy)
ISBN: 9780674016828

Leonardo Bruni was famous in his day as a translator, orator, and historian, and was one of the best-selling authors of the 15th century. Bruni's 'History of the Florentine People' is generally considered the first modern work of history.

Biography, Historiography, and Modes of Philosophizing

Biography, Historiography, and Modes of Philosophizing
Author: Patrick Baker
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 426
Release: 2017-03-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 9004339752

By way of essays and a selection of primary sources in parallel text, Biography, Historiography, and Modes of Philosophizing provides an introduction to a vast, significant, but neglected corpus of early modern literature: collective biography. It focuses especially on the various related strands of political, philosophical, and intellectual and cultural biography as well as on the intersection between biography, historiography, and philosophy. Individual texts from the fifteenth to the eighteenth century are presented as examples of how the ancient collective biographical tradition – as represented above all by Plutarch, Suetonius, Diogenes Laertius, and Jerome – was received and transformed in the Renaissance and beyond in accordance with the needs of humanism, religious controversy, politics, and the development of modern philosophy and science.

History of the Florentine People: Books 1-4

History of the Florentine People: Books 1-4
Author: Leonardo Bruni
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 556
Release: 2001
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780674005068

Leonardo Bruni was famous in his day as a translator, orator, and historian, and was one of the best-selling authors of the 15th century. Bruni's History of the Florentine People is generally considered the first modern work of history.

The Communion of the Book

The Communion of the Book
Author: David Williams
Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 482
Release: 2022-11-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0228015863

The modern world was not created by the civilization of Renaissance Italy, the advent of the printing press, or the marriage restrictions imposed by the medieval church. Rather, it was widespread reading that brought about most of the cognitive, psychological, and social changes that we recognize as peculiarly modern. David Williams combines book and communications history with readings of major works by Petrarch, Bruni, Valla, Reuchlin, Erasmus, Foxe, and Milton to argue that expanding literacy in the Renaissance was the impetus for modern civilization, turning a culture of arid logic and religious ceremonialism into a world of individual readers who discovered a new form of communion in the act of reading. It was not the theologians Luther and Calvin who first taught readers to become what they read, but the biblical philologist Erasmus, who encountered the divine presence on every page of the gospels. From this sacramental form of reading came other modes of humanist reading, particularly in law, history, and classics, leading to the birth of the nation-state. As literacy rates rose, readers of all backgrounds gained and embodied the distinctly modern values of liberty, free speech, toleration, individualism, self-determination, and democratic institutions. Communion and community were linked, performed in novel ways through revolutionary forms of reading. In this conclusion to a quartet of books on media change, Williams makes a compelling case for readers and acts of reading as the true drivers of social, political, and cultural modernity – and for digital media as its looming nemesis.