Studies on Florence and the Italian Renaissance in honour of F.W. Kent

Interdisciplinary in scope and grounded in visual, literary, and archival materials, the essays in this book probe many different facets of the society of Renaissance Italy, including the role of kinship and networks, power and agency in Medicean Florence, patronage and spirituality, and the generat...

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Bibliographic Details
Contributors: Howard, Peter (Editor) ; Hewlett, Cecilia (Editor) ; Kent, Francis W. 1942-2010 (Honoree)
Format: Electronic/Print Book
Language:English
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Published: Turnhout Brepols [2016]
In: Europa sacra (volume 20)
Year: 2016
Series/Journal:Europa sacra volume 20
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Florence / Art / Italy / Renaissance / History 1420-1600
B Kent, Francis W. 1942-2010
Further subjects:B Collection of essays
B Kent, F. W (Francis William) (1942-)
B Festschrift
B Kent, Francis W. 1942-2010
B Renaissance (Italy)
B Renaissance (Italy) (Florence)
B Bibliography
Online Access: Inhaltsbeschreibung
Inhaltsverzeichnis (Verlag)
Klappentext (Verlag)
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Summary:Interdisciplinary in scope and grounded in visual, literary, and archival materials, the essays in this book probe many different facets of the society of Renaissance Italy, including the role of kinship and networks, power and agency in Medicean Florence, patronage and spirituality, and the generation and consumption of culture. This volume honours F.W. (Bill) Kent (1942-2010), internationally renowned scholar of Renaissance Florence and founding editor of the Europa Sacra series. Kent belonged to an energetic generation of Australians who, in the late 1960s, tackled the Florentine archives and engaged key issues confronting historians of that ever-fascinating city. With his meticulous archival findings and contextual interpretations spanning a scholarly career of more than forty years, Kent engaged with, indeed drove, the scholarly response to many of the issues that have shaped not just our current and emerging understanding of Florence and other urban centres of Italy, but along with that, a more nuanced view of the role of frontier towns and the countryside. Interdisciplinary in scope and grounded in visual, literary, and archival materials, the essays presented here explore a variety of facets of the society of Renaissance Italy, confronting and extending themes that have been emerging in recent decades and exemplified by Kent's work. These themes include the role of kinship and networks, power and agency in Laurentian Florence, gender, ritual, representation, patronage, spirituality, and the generation and consumption of material culture.
Inhaltsverz.: Part 1. Power and agency in Mediccean Florence -- Part 2. Family, friends, networks -- Part 3. Spirituality and patronage -- Part 4. Consuming culture
ISBN:2503552765
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1484/M.ES-EB.5.106021