Pierre de L'Estoile and his World in the Wars of Religion: The Past and Present Book Series
Autor Tom Hamiltonen Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 aug 2021
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
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Paperback (1) | 184.81 lei 10-16 zile | |
OUP OXFORD – 26 aug 2021 | 184.81 lei 10-16 zile | |
Hardback (1) | 667.42 lei 31-37 zile | |
OUP OXFORD – 26 apr 2017 | 667.42 lei 31-37 zile |
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198867104
ISBN-10: 0198867107
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 35 black and white figures, tables, and illustrations
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.06 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria The Past and Present Book Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198867107
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 35 black and white figures, tables, and illustrations
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.06 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria The Past and Present Book Series
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Tom Hamilton is an Assistant Professor in Early Modern History at Durham University.
Recenzii
Tom Hamilton's book is a beautifully crafted study of the life and times of one of the most well-known and oft-quoted authors of the period, the royal office-holder and diarist Pierre de L'Estoile... Hamilton is an excellent story-teller and makes effective use of vignettes to draw the reader into the physical and professional world of L'Estoile and his fellow royal office-holders... Hamilton provides careful analysis of L'Estoile's manuscripts and the sources that informed them, including printed images and broadsheets, as well as the contents of his library... This is a remarkable book, fluently written and nicely illustrated.
The reader will find many interesting and important sources on the Wars of Religion collected in one place, with new and important insights. This clearly opens new possibilities for studies of the period and in the study of early modern autobiographical writing.
Hamilton's great contribution in this work is to take L'Estoile "out of the footnotes" of other works and make him the central focus of study ... Hamilton situates L'Estoile among many other essayists, diarists, and collectors of the early modern period -- including his contemporary Michel de Montaigne -- who saw their activities as engaging with and reflecting on the times in which they lived. This well-written account, which is accessible to the nonspecialist, is a welcome and important addition to the field, and one that will shape the use of L'Estoile as a source by future historians.
Hamilton blends elements of biography and microhistory into a critical analysis of how L'Estoile acquired, engaged, and selected the materials that shaped his works. The result is a more critical understanding of L'Estoile's role in fashioning our understanding of the religious wars. It also provides a fascinating portrait of his private life, his social world, his role as a collector of curiosities, and his own personal experiences of living through the era of the French religious wars.
This well-written and engaging monograph provides a meticulous analysis of L'Estoile's record keeping practices and his world.
Hamilton's work demonstrates the process through which L'Estoile's memory helped to determine our own interpretation of the period, an important observation for anyone interested in the Wars of Religion in particular or the construction of historical memory in general.
Thoroughly researched, tautly argued and well supported with telling examples, this is an important book ... a model study of how memory is constructed through the creation and manipulation of texts.
a fascinating and accomplished monograph ... Tom Hamilton transcends the apparent constraints of the subject by an approach that is original and striking ... [it] will change the way that historians of this period approach his important source-text.
Tom Hamilton has managed to sketch a vivid portrayal of someone who has served as a prism for generations of scholars through which to view everyday events in 16th-century Paris during the turmoil of wars, with his sharp, distanced and trenchant characterizations ... All in all, Tom Hamilton presents a densely researched, sensible and carefully written intellectual and socio-political biography of one of the most central, individual, and interesting testimonies of the period of radicalization during the French Wars of Religion.
The reader will find many interesting and important sources on the Wars of Religion collected in one place, with new and important insights. This clearly opens new possibilities for studies of the period and in the study of early modern autobiographical writing.
Hamilton's great contribution in this work is to take L'Estoile "out of the footnotes" of other works and make him the central focus of study ... Hamilton situates L'Estoile among many other essayists, diarists, and collectors of the early modern period -- including his contemporary Michel de Montaigne -- who saw their activities as engaging with and reflecting on the times in which they lived. This well-written account, which is accessible to the nonspecialist, is a welcome and important addition to the field, and one that will shape the use of L'Estoile as a source by future historians.
Hamilton blends elements of biography and microhistory into a critical analysis of how L'Estoile acquired, engaged, and selected the materials that shaped his works. The result is a more critical understanding of L'Estoile's role in fashioning our understanding of the religious wars. It also provides a fascinating portrait of his private life, his social world, his role as a collector of curiosities, and his own personal experiences of living through the era of the French religious wars.
This well-written and engaging monograph provides a meticulous analysis of L'Estoile's record keeping practices and his world.
Hamilton's work demonstrates the process through which L'Estoile's memory helped to determine our own interpretation of the period, an important observation for anyone interested in the Wars of Religion in particular or the construction of historical memory in general.
Thoroughly researched, tautly argued and well supported with telling examples, this is an important book ... a model study of how memory is constructed through the creation and manipulation of texts.
a fascinating and accomplished monograph ... Tom Hamilton transcends the apparent constraints of the subject by an approach that is original and striking ... [it] will change the way that historians of this period approach his important source-text.
Tom Hamilton has managed to sketch a vivid portrayal of someone who has served as a prism for generations of scholars through which to view everyday events in 16th-century Paris during the turmoil of wars, with his sharp, distanced and trenchant characterizations ... All in all, Tom Hamilton presents a densely researched, sensible and carefully written intellectual and socio-political biography of one of the most central, individual, and interesting testimonies of the period of radicalization during the French Wars of Religion.