Ebook {Epub PDF} The Swerve: How the World Became Modern by Stephen Greenblatt
· Stephen Greenblatt is the John Cogan University Professor of Humanities at Harvard University and general editor of the eminently respected “Norton Shakespea. This is precisely Stephen Greenblatt’s aim in The Swerve, which promises nothing less, as its subtitle asserts, than to explain “how the world became modern.” The key act occurred in a dusty monastery in fifteenth-century Germany, where Lucretius’s On the Nature of Things (De rerum natura), was, after centuries of obscurity, found by an Italian www.doorway.ru: William Caferro. Renowned historian Stephen Greenblatt’s works shoot to the top of the New York Times best-seller list. With The Swerve, Greenblatt transports listeners to the dawn of the Renaissance and chronicles the life of an intrepid book lover who rescued the Roman philosophical text On the Nature of Things from certain oblivion/5(K).
Stephen Greenblatt. Stephen Greenblatt (Ph.D. Yale) is Cogan University Professor of English and American Literature and Language at Harvard www.doorway.ru General Editor of The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Eighth Edition, he is the author of nine books, including Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare; Hamlet in Purgatory; Practicing New Historicism; Marvelous. "The ideas in The Swerve are tucked, cannily, inside a quest narrative The details that Mr. Greenblatt supplies throughout The Swerve are tangy and exact There is abundant evidence here of what is Mr. Greenblatt's great and rare gift as a writer: an ability, to borrow a phrase from The Swerve, to feel fully 'the concentrated force of the buried past.'". The Swerve ebook mid; How the World Became Modern By Stephen Greenblatt. Read a Sample. Sign up to save your library. With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (paperback edition: The Swerve: How the Renaissance Began) is a book by Stephen Greenblatt and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction and National Book Award for Nonfiction. Greenblatt tells the story of how Poggio Bracciolini, a 15th-century papal emissary and obsessive book hunter, saved the last copy of the Roman poet Lucretius 's De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things) from near-terminal neglect in a German monastery. Sept. 27, The literary critic, theorist and Shakespeare scholar Stephen Greenblatt’s new book, “The Swerve: How the World Became Modern,” is partly about an obsessive book collector. In “The Swerve,” the literary historian Stephen Greenblatt investigates why his book nearly died, how it was saved and what its rescue means to us. A world without Lucretius seemed.
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