Renaissance Florence
Herausgeber: Crum, Roger J.; Paoletti, John T.
Renaissance Florence
Herausgeber: Crum, Roger J.; Paoletti, John T.
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This book examines the social history of Florence from the fourteenth through to sixteenth centuries.
This book examines the social history of Florence from the fourteenth through to sixteenth centuries.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 694
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juni 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 988g
- ISBN-13: 9780521727877
- ISBN-10: 0521727871
- Artikelnr.: 26370720
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 694
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juni 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 988g
- ISBN-13: 9780521727877
- ISBN-10: 0521727871
- Artikelnr.: 26370720
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introducion Roger J. Crum and John T. Paoletti; Part I. The Theatre of
Florence: 1. Florentine politics and urban spaces John M. Najemy; 2.
Theatres of everyday life Sharon T. Strocchia; Part II. The Public Realm:
3. The Piazza della Signoria as practiced place Stephen J. Milner; 4.
Structuring communal history through repeated metaphors of rule Sarah Blake
McHam; 5. Corporate beneficence and historical narratives of communal
well-being Philip Gavitt; 6. The spaces of plebian ritual and the
boundaries of transgression David Rosenthal; 7. Ritual trading at the
Florentine wool cloth botteghe Adrienne Atwell; Part III. Relatives,
Friends, and Neighbors: 8. Neighborhood as microcosm Nicholas Eckstein; 9.
The palace and villa as spaces of patrician self-definition Michael
Lingohr; 10. '... full of people of every sort': the domestic interior
Roger J. Crum and John T. Paoletti; Part IV. Men and Women: 11. Mean
streets, familiar streets, or the fat woodcarver and the masculine spaces
of renaissance Florence Guido Ruggiero; 12. Did women have a space? Natalie
Thomas; Part V. The Spaces of the Spiritual: 13. Sacred place and
liturgical space: Florence's renaissance churches Robert W. Gaston; 14.
Memorial chapels in churches: The privatization and transformation of
sacred spaces Jonathan Katz Nelson; 15. The aural space of the sacred in
renaissance Florence Peter Howard; 16. Identity and alliance: urban
presence, spatial privilege, and Florentine renaissance convents Saundra
Weddle; Part VI. Across Space and Time: 17. The workshop as the space of
collaborative artisitic production Anabel Thomas; 18. The replicated image
in Florence, 1300-1600 Patricia Emison; 19. From the workshop to the
academy: the emergence of the artist in renaissance Florence Andrea
Bolland.
Florence: 1. Florentine politics and urban spaces John M. Najemy; 2.
Theatres of everyday life Sharon T. Strocchia; Part II. The Public Realm:
3. The Piazza della Signoria as practiced place Stephen J. Milner; 4.
Structuring communal history through repeated metaphors of rule Sarah Blake
McHam; 5. Corporate beneficence and historical narratives of communal
well-being Philip Gavitt; 6. The spaces of plebian ritual and the
boundaries of transgression David Rosenthal; 7. Ritual trading at the
Florentine wool cloth botteghe Adrienne Atwell; Part III. Relatives,
Friends, and Neighbors: 8. Neighborhood as microcosm Nicholas Eckstein; 9.
The palace and villa as spaces of patrician self-definition Michael
Lingohr; 10. '... full of people of every sort': the domestic interior
Roger J. Crum and John T. Paoletti; Part IV. Men and Women: 11. Mean
streets, familiar streets, or the fat woodcarver and the masculine spaces
of renaissance Florence Guido Ruggiero; 12. Did women have a space? Natalie
Thomas; Part V. The Spaces of the Spiritual: 13. Sacred place and
liturgical space: Florence's renaissance churches Robert W. Gaston; 14.
Memorial chapels in churches: The privatization and transformation of
sacred spaces Jonathan Katz Nelson; 15. The aural space of the sacred in
renaissance Florence Peter Howard; 16. Identity and alliance: urban
presence, spatial privilege, and Florentine renaissance convents Saundra
Weddle; Part VI. Across Space and Time: 17. The workshop as the space of
collaborative artisitic production Anabel Thomas; 18. The replicated image
in Florence, 1300-1600 Patricia Emison; 19. From the workshop to the
academy: the emergence of the artist in renaissance Florence Andrea
Bolland.
Introducion Roger J. Crum and John T. Paoletti; Part I. The Theatre of
Florence: 1. Florentine politics and urban spaces John M. Najemy; 2.
Theatres of everyday life Sharon T. Strocchia; Part II. The Public Realm:
3. The Piazza della Signoria as practiced place Stephen J. Milner; 4.
Structuring communal history through repeated metaphors of rule Sarah Blake
McHam; 5. Corporate beneficence and historical narratives of communal
well-being Philip Gavitt; 6. The spaces of plebian ritual and the
boundaries of transgression David Rosenthal; 7. Ritual trading at the
Florentine wool cloth botteghe Adrienne Atwell; Part III. Relatives,
Friends, and Neighbors: 8. Neighborhood as microcosm Nicholas Eckstein; 9.
The palace and villa as spaces of patrician self-definition Michael
Lingohr; 10. '... full of people of every sort': the domestic interior
Roger J. Crum and John T. Paoletti; Part IV. Men and Women: 11. Mean
streets, familiar streets, or the fat woodcarver and the masculine spaces
of renaissance Florence Guido Ruggiero; 12. Did women have a space? Natalie
Thomas; Part V. The Spaces of the Spiritual: 13. Sacred place and
liturgical space: Florence's renaissance churches Robert W. Gaston; 14.
Memorial chapels in churches: The privatization and transformation of
sacred spaces Jonathan Katz Nelson; 15. The aural space of the sacred in
renaissance Florence Peter Howard; 16. Identity and alliance: urban
presence, spatial privilege, and Florentine renaissance convents Saundra
Weddle; Part VI. Across Space and Time: 17. The workshop as the space of
collaborative artisitic production Anabel Thomas; 18. The replicated image
in Florence, 1300-1600 Patricia Emison; 19. From the workshop to the
academy: the emergence of the artist in renaissance Florence Andrea
Bolland.
Florence: 1. Florentine politics and urban spaces John M. Najemy; 2.
Theatres of everyday life Sharon T. Strocchia; Part II. The Public Realm:
3. The Piazza della Signoria as practiced place Stephen J. Milner; 4.
Structuring communal history through repeated metaphors of rule Sarah Blake
McHam; 5. Corporate beneficence and historical narratives of communal
well-being Philip Gavitt; 6. The spaces of plebian ritual and the
boundaries of transgression David Rosenthal; 7. Ritual trading at the
Florentine wool cloth botteghe Adrienne Atwell; Part III. Relatives,
Friends, and Neighbors: 8. Neighborhood as microcosm Nicholas Eckstein; 9.
The palace and villa as spaces of patrician self-definition Michael
Lingohr; 10. '... full of people of every sort': the domestic interior
Roger J. Crum and John T. Paoletti; Part IV. Men and Women: 11. Mean
streets, familiar streets, or the fat woodcarver and the masculine spaces
of renaissance Florence Guido Ruggiero; 12. Did women have a space? Natalie
Thomas; Part V. The Spaces of the Spiritual: 13. Sacred place and
liturgical space: Florence's renaissance churches Robert W. Gaston; 14.
Memorial chapels in churches: The privatization and transformation of
sacred spaces Jonathan Katz Nelson; 15. The aural space of the sacred in
renaissance Florence Peter Howard; 16. Identity and alliance: urban
presence, spatial privilege, and Florentine renaissance convents Saundra
Weddle; Part VI. Across Space and Time: 17. The workshop as the space of
collaborative artisitic production Anabel Thomas; 18. The replicated image
in Florence, 1300-1600 Patricia Emison; 19. From the workshop to the
academy: the emergence of the artist in renaissance Florence Andrea
Bolland.