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Rapsoden en rebellen : literatuur en politiek in verschillende culturen
Authors: --- --- ---
ISBN: 9051707363 Year: 2003

Modernité et pérennité de Jean-Jacques Rousseau : mélanges en l'honneur de Jean-Louis Lecercle
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ISBN: 2745306413 9782745306418 Year: 2002 Volume: 9 Publisher: Paris: Champion,

The significance of theory
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ISBN: 0631172718 0631172696 Year: 1990 Volume: vol *3 Publisher: Oxford Cambridge, Mass. Blackwell

Political rhetoric, power and renaissance women
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ISBN: 0791425460 Year: 1995 Volume: *2 Publisher: Albany, NY : State University of New York [SUNY] Press,

Staging resistance : essays on political theater
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ISBN: 0472066714 Year: 1998 Volume: *13 Publisher: Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press

Machiavellian Rhetoric
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ISBN: 1400821282 1400812259 0691034915 9781400812257 9780691034911 9781400821280 Year: 1994 Publisher: Princeton, NJ

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Abstract

Historians of political thought have argued that the real Machiavelli is the republican thinker and theorist of civic virtù. Machiavellian Rhetoric argues in contrast that Renaissance readers were right to see Machiavelli as a Machiavel, a figure of force and fraud, rhetorical cunning and deception. Taking the rhetorical Machiavel as a point of departure, Victoria Kahn argues that this figure is not simply the result of a naïve misreading of Machiavelli but is attuned to the rhetorical dimension of his political theory in a way that later thematic readings of Machiavelli are not. Her aim is to provide a revised history of Renaissance Machiavellism, particularly in England: one that sees the Machiavel and the republican as equally valid--and related--readings of Machiavelli's work. In this revised history, Machiavelli offers a rhetoric for dealing with the realm of de facto political power, rather than a political theory with a coherent thematic content; and Renaissance Machiavellism includes a variety of rhetorically sophisticated appreciations and appropriations of Machiavelli's own rhetorical approach to politics. Part I offers readings of The Prince, The Discourses, and Counter-Reformation responses to Machiavelli. Part II discusses the reception of Machiavelli in sixteenth-and seventeenth-century England. Part III focuses on Milton, especially Areopagitica, Comus, and Paradise Lost.

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