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Inventing the Renaissance: The Myth of a Golden Age

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Inventing the Renaissance: The Myth of a Golden Age

Contributors:

By (Author) Ada Palmer

ISBN:

9781035910120

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Apollo

Publication Date:

3rd June 2025

UK Publication Date:

13th February 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Language: history and general works

Dewey:

940.21

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

768

Dimensions:

Width 153mm, Height 234mm

Description

The Renaissance is one of the most studied and celebrated eras of history. Spanning the end of the Middle Ages to the beginning of modernity, it has come to symbolise the transformative rebirth of knowledge, art, culture and political thought in Europe. And for the last two hundred years, historians have struggled to describe what makes this famous golden age unique. In Inventing the Renaissance, acclaimed historian Ada Palmer provides a fresh perspective on what makes this epoch so captivating. Her witty and irreverent journey through the fantasies historians have constructed about the period show how its legend derives more from later centuries mythmaking than from the often grim reality of the period itself. She examines its defining figures and movements: the enduring legacy of Niccol Machiavelli, the rediscovery of the classics, the rise of the Medici and fall of the Borgias, the astonishing artistic achievements of Michelangelo, Leonardo, and Cellini, the impact of the Inquisition and the expansion of secular Humanism. Palmer also explores the ties between culture and money: books, for example, could cost as much as grand houses, so the periods innovative thinkers could only thrive with the help of the super-rich. She offers fifteen provocative and entertaining character portraits of Renaissance men and women, some famous, some obscure, whose intersecting lives show how the real Renaissance was more unexpected, more international and, above all, more desperate than its golden reputation suggests. Drawing on her popular blogs and writing with her characteristic energy and wit, Palmer presents the Renaissance as we have never seen it before. Colloquial, funny and brilliant, you would never expect a work of deep scholarship to make you alternately laugh and cry.

Reviews

Generous, brilliant, and inviting, Ada Palmers Inventing the Renaissance is a triumph... this is a work of deep erudition worn lightly but excitingly that offers a history of the Renaissance with a unique and personal imprint. If you are a scholar of the period, you will find new insights and interpretations, and if you are coming to the Renaissance for the first time, you will find an engaging and eloquent companion in Ada Palmer. * Professor Christopher S. Celenza, Johns Hopkins University *
Inventing the Renaissance does something magical: it manages to take a tightly-held conviction (that there was a thing in European history called 'the Renaissance'), dismantle it with humor and intelligence, then put it back together as something different and more true to the past itself. But maybe more importantly, Palmers expertise and storytelling helps us better understand how golden ages are imagined, and why rejecting those invented constructions of the past provides us with hope as we confront our own contemporary world. As she says herself: 'we can do better than the Renaissance.' * Professor Matthew Gabriele, Virginia Tech *

Author Bio

Ada Palmer is an internationally acclaimed science fiction and fantasy novelist, historian and composer. She completed her PhD at Harvard, teaches History at the University of Chicago, blogs and podcasts at ExUrbe.com, and composes and performs close harmony a cappella music with the group Sassafrass.

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