Lucretius and the Early Modern

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AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
NOTE EDITORE
The rediscovery in the fifteenth century of Lucretius' De rerum natura was a challenge to received ideas. The poem offered a vision of the creation of the universe, the origins and goals of human life, and the formation of the state, all without reference to divine intervention. It has been hailed in Stephen Greenblatt's best-selling book, The Swerve, as the poem that invented modernity. But how modern did early modern readers want to become? This collection of essays offers a series of case studies which demonstrate the sophisticated ways in which some readers might relate the poem to received ideas, assimilating Lucretius to theories of natural law and even natural theology, while others were at once attracted to Lucretius' subversiveness and driven to dissociate themselves from him. The volume presents a wide geographical range, from Florence and Venice to France, England, and Germany, and extends chronologically from Lucretius' contemporary audience to the European Enlightenment. It covers both major authors such as Montaigne and neglected figures such as Italian neo-Latin poets, and is the first book in the field to pay close attention to Lucretius' impact on political thought, both in philosophy - from Machiavelli, through Hobbes, to Rousseau - and in the topical spin put on the De rerum natura by translators in revolutionary England. It combines careful attention to material contexts of book production and distribution with close readings of particular interpretations and translations, to present a rich and nuanced profile of the mark made by a remarkable poem.

SOMMARIO
1 - Epicurean Subversion? Lucretius' First Proem and Contemporary Roman Culture2 - Lucretius in the Early Modern Period: Texts and Contexts3 - Lucretian Naturalism and the Evolution of Machiavelli's Ethics4 - Poetic Flights or Retreats? Latin Lucretian Poems in Sixteenth-Century Italy5 - Lucretius, Irreligion, and Atheism in Early Modern Venice6 - 'Well said/well thought': How Montaigne Read his Lucretius7 - Michel de Marolles's 1650 Translation of Lucretius and its Reception in England8 - Lucretianism and Some Seventeenth-Century Theories of Human Origin9 - Natural Reason and the Laws of Nature in Early Modern Versions of Lucretius10 - Atheists and Republicans: Interpreting Lucretius in Revolutionary England11 - Political Philosophy in a Lucretian Mode

AUTORE
David Norbrook is Emeritus Merton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford. Philip Hardie is a Senior Research Fellow at Trinity College, University of Cambridge. Stephen Harrison is a Fellow and Tutor in Classics at Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780198713845
  • Collana: Classical Presences
  • Dimensioni: 219 x 25.2 x 148 mm Ø 536 gr
  • Formato: Copertina rigida
  • Illustration Notes: 15 black and white illustrations
  • Pagine Arabe: 332