ABSTRACT

With Italy at its centre, but encompassing the whole of Renaissance Europe, this evocative history challenges some of the popularly-held views on the Renaissance period. In particular, whilst always acknowledging the brilliance and exhuberance of Renaissance culture, Robin Kirkpatrick draws equal attention to the strangeness and often unresolved tensions that lay beneath the surface of that culture.Insisting on a European rather than purely Italian viewpoint, he embraces Renaissance thinking and culture in all its diversity: from Northern thinkers such as Cusanus, Luther and Calvin, to the painting of Van der Weyden and El Greco, and the music of the Flemish musicians, Josquin des Prez and Orlando Lassus. Special attention is also paid to the unique contribution made by Margueritte of Navarre to the development of humanist culture. The book concludes with a study of Shakespeare in which his plays are viewed as a searching critique of some of the main principles of Renaissance culture.

chapter |28 pages

Introduction: Renaissance Questions

part One|133 pages

Thought and Context

chapter Chapter One|42 pages

Cities, Spaces and Institutions

chapter Chapter Two|33 pages

Education, Imitation and Creation

chapter Chapter Three|30 pages

Reformation and the Renaissance Individual

chapter Chapter Four|26 pages

Science, Art and Language: A Conclusion to Part One

part Two|208 pages

The Arts

chapter Chapter Five|55 pages

The Figurative Arts

chapter Chapter Six|49 pages

Lyric, Epic and Pastoral

chapter Chapter Seven|46 pages

Music

chapter Chapter Eight|56 pages

Prose Fiction and Theatre