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Forms of Conflict and Rivalries in Renaissance Europe PDF

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Super alta perennis Studien zur Wirkung der Klassischen Antike Band 17 Herausgegebenvon Uwe Baumann, Marc Laureys und Winfried Schmitz David A. Lines / Marc Laureys / Jill Kraye (eds.) Forms of Conflict and Rivalries in Renaissance Europe V&R unipress Bonn University Press ® MIX Papierausverantwor- tungsvollenQuellen www.fsc.org FSC®C083411 BibliografischeInformationderDeutschenNationalbibliothek DieDeutscheNationalbibliothekverzeichnetdiesePublikationinderDeutschen Nationalbibliografie;detailliertebibliografischeDatensindimInternetüber http://dnb.d-nb.deabrufbar. ISBN978-3-8471-0409-4 ISBN978-3-8470-0409-7(E-Book) VeröffentlichungenderBonnUniversityPress erscheinenimVerlagV&RunipressGmbH. GedrucktmitfreundlicherUnterstützungdes„LeverhulmeTrustInternationalNetwork“ (Großbritannien)zumThema„RenaissanceConflictandRivalries:CulturalPolemicsinEurope, c.1300–c.1650“undderPhilosophischenFakultätderUniversitätBonn. (cid:211)2015,V&RunipressinGöttingen/www.v-r.de AlleRechtevorbehalten.DasWerkundseineTeilesindurheberrechtlichgeschützt.Jede VerwertunginanderenalsdengesetzlichzugelassenenFällenbedarfdervorherigen schriftlichenEinwilligungdesVerlages. PrintedinGermany. Titelbild:LucadellaRobbia,relieffortheFlorentinecampanile,c.1437(Foto:WarburgInstitute, PhotographicCollection,outofcopyright) DruckundBindung:CPIbuchbuecher.deGmbH,Birkach GedrucktaufalterungsbeständigemPapier. Contents DavidA.Lines/MarcLaureys/JillKraye Foreword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 JeroenDeKeyser FrancescoFilelfo’sFeudwithPoggioBracciolini . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 ConcettaBianca Contentiosaedisputationesagliesordidellastampa . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 DonatellaCoppini LapolemicadeimitationefraAngeloPolizianoePaoloCortesi.Dalla linguadiCiceroneallalinguadelcardinale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 ArnoldBecker Hutten’sPolemicalDialogues:LiteraryPositioninganditsImpacts . . . 61 UweBaumann TheHumanisticandReligiousControversiesandRivalriesofThomas More(1477/8–1535):ATypologyofLiteraryFormsandGenres? . . . . . 79 GuidoGiglioni ScaligerversusCardanoversusScaliger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 IreneReginato/EugenioBurgio FoundationMythsandTradeConflicts:Ramusio,theFourthCrusade andtheVenetianMerchants’CrisisintheSixteenthCentury . . . . . . . 131 AlessioCotugno LeAnnotationidiPiccolominielaPoeticadiCastelvetroaconfronto: tecnicaargomentativa,vocabolariocritico,dispositiviesegetici . . . . . . 161 6 Contents EugenioRefini TheCourtierandthePhilosopher’sStone:DialogueandConflictinFabio Glissenti’sDiscorsimorali . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207 IreneVerziagi FormedellapolemicaantiprotestanteeantigesuiticaneiRagguaglidi ParnasodiTraianoBoccalini . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223 Paul-AlexisMellet Lesremontrances :uneexpressionparadoxaledelasociƒtƒpolitique (XVI(cid:192)mesi(cid:192)cle) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247 Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273 IndexNominum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277 David A. Lines / Marc Laureys / Jill Kraye Foreword Betweenaround1300and1650,inaperiodoftenevokedforitsextraordinary cultural ferment, Europe was riven by a series of momentous social, cultural, intellectual,andreligiouscontrasts.Prominentaspectsofthenewstateofaffairs werevehementdebates(regarding,forexample,thestatusofthefigurativearts, the value of the vernacular, the relationship of the disciplines, or posed as contrasts between Aristotle and Plato, mathematics and natural philosophy, Gothic and Neoclassical styles, monarchy and republicanism, the Catholic Church and Protestant reform), invectives, and physical clashes and violence, culminatinginthedisastrousThirtyYears’War.Inaddition,newdevelopments such as the invention of printing, the discovery of the Americas, the con- frontationwithIslamandtheOttoman Empire,andtheapplicationofmathe- maticstoscienceledtothecoexistenceofestablishedandnewerworldviewsand practices,whichviedwitheachotherforacceptanceandstatus.Webelievethat this culture of opposition, contention, confrontation, and competition (well captured by the German term Streitkultur)1 was in many ways central to the period’s cultural achievements. It was prominent in both the socio-political realmandintheliterary,artistic,legal,religious,andphilosophicalproduction of the Renaissance, and functioned as a catalyst for a wide range of cultural developments. Inordertoanalysethisrelationshipbetweenconflictandculturalproduction onabroadscale,scholarsfromvariousinstitutionshavebandedtogetherinan internationalnetwork.WiththesupportoftheLeverhulmeTrust,aprojecthas 1 ThetermStreitkulturfirstaroseinthe1980samongsocialscientistsandwasthenpickedupin politicalcontextstodenotefairnessandopennessinpoliticaldebatesasanecessaryrequi- rementofademocraticsociety;seeSarcinelli(1990).Itisnowusedinvarioussenses.Inthe context of German scholarship surrounding the historical development of ‘the culture of conflict’, especially, the term can denote either verbal and physical violence as a social practice,amodeofcommunicationandinteractionornon-violentexchangeandnegotiation ofconflictingviewsandinterests.ThisdistinctionispointedoutbySchwerhoff(2013),215– 216. 8 DavidA.Lines/MarcLaureys/JillKraye beenformedon‘Renaissance Conflict and Rivalries:Cultural Polemics in Eu- rope,c.1300–c.1650’.Theinitiative,whichrunsfromOctober2012untilSep- tember2015, isledby theCentrefor theStudyoftheRenaissance attheUni- versityofWarwick(PI:DavidLines,ItalianStudies)andincludesscholarsatthe universitiesofBonn,Leuven,Ca’Foscari(Venice),Florence,andTheWarburg InstituteinLondon,aswellas,mostrecently,theCentred’˚tudesSupƒrieuresde laRenaissanceinTours.Oneoftheprincipalobjectivesofthenetworkhasbeen toexaminetheissueofStreitkulturfrommultipledisciplinaryperspectives;and wearethereforeverypleasednotonly tohavedifferentnationalandhistorio- graphicaltraditionsrepresented,butalsotohaveobtainedtheparticipationof scholarsfromaremarkablevarietyoffields,includingClassics,History,English, French,andItalianStudies,Neo-LatinPhilology,HistoryofPhilosophy,History ofReligion,andHistoryofArt. Our Leverhulme International Network attempts to assess the role and functionofconflictandrivalriesasapositiveagentofculturalproductionand change during the Renaissance – the underlying assumption being that ever sinceHesiod’sdistinctionbetweengoodandbadEris(WorksandDays,11–24) thereexists,alongsidetheconceptofdestructiveconflictandstrife,anotionof confrontation and management ofopposing interests thatcan be a catalyst of intellectual creativity and cultural progress. Although there is by now a sub- stantial literature onindividual aspects ofRenaissance Streitkultur,2 there has been little in the way of international and interdisciplinary research into the phenomenon. Our network therefore tries to bridge individual approaches through a stronger contextualization of, for instance, ideas and artistic pro- ductionwithin social and institutional realities. Although it does not exclude physicalviolence,itparticularlyexplorestherealmofnon-violentconflictand the nature and limits of its acceptance (artistic representations of violence, pasquinades, invectives, disputations, and suchlike). In the process, we ask whether‘conflict’,‘rivalry’,oranotherlabelismostusefulforunderstandingthe confrontationsthattookplace–atboththeoreticalandpracticallevels–between various forms and expressions of Renaissance philosophy, religion, art, and literature(humanismandscholasticism,thedisputadellearti,orargumentsfor thesuperiorityofpoetryoverotherliterarygenresorofChristianityoverIslam). Importantpointsofourdiscussionsincludethefollowing:whywerepolemicsso central to Renaissance culture, even for figures like Erasmus? How were po- lemics exploitedto forge national/regional, confessional or professional iden- 2 BeforethecreationoftheLeverhulmeInternationalNetworkon‘RenaissanceConflictand Rivalries’ the teammembersfromtheUniversityofBonnexploredthis topic,along with severalothercolleagues,inaseriesofinterdisciplinaryworkshopsandconferences.Someof theresultsofthisresearchhavebeenpublishedinBaumann/Becker/Steiner-Weber(2008), Laureys/Simons(2010),andLaureys/Simons(2013). Foreword 9 tities?Whatroledidthere-appropriationofclassicalrhetoricplayinmoulding this picture of a conflictual Renaissance? And to what extent did rhetorical formulaemaskprofessionalrivalriesandjealousiesratherthanstraightforward, fundamentalideologicaldifferences? Starting from the premise that polemics could be a positive producer of cultureintheearly modernperiod,andthatthemechanisms whereby there- lationship between culture and conflict worked deserve much more intense scrutiny,ourNetworkhasformulatedresearchquestionsfallingintothreemain categories: – Forms:towhatextentwereconflictandrivalriesintheRenaissanceexpressed through differing (e.g., verbal vs visual) media, languages (e.g., Latin vs vernacular), and genres (e.g., invectives, pasquinades, rival translations of theclassics,worksofscholarship,sculpturevspainting,religiousvssecular art or literature)? What processes determined these differing forms and to what extent was it acceptable to express notions of conflict and rivalries throughthem? – Spheres:inwhatwaysdidtheidentityofthewarringparties,theaudienceto whichnarrativesofconflictweredirected,andtheparticularsocial,temporal orgeographicalmilieu,affectthewaysinwhichconflictandrivalriescouldor couldnot beculturally productive?Doesit, for instance, makeadifference whether the audience is made up of Catholics or Protestants, of nobles or merchants, of university students or academicians? What are the borders between private and public or between personal and collective spheres in termsofconflict? – Management and resolution: can a trajectory be mapped of how European conflictandrivalryunfoldedovertime,oratleastofthenorms,theories,laws, techniques,andprocedureswhichweredevelopedinordertocontainit?In reaction to war-torn Europe, for instance, Justus Lipsius and his con- temporaries resurrected particular aspects of Stoic philosophy. How suc- cessfulweretheseeffortstomanageandcontainconflict? These topics are being explored through annual dedicated workshops. The questionof‘Forms’wasdiscussedthroughacolloquiumthattookplaceon9–10 May 2013 at the University of Warwick. The eleven speakers approached the subjectfromavarietyofviewpointsthatcanbesubsumedundertwoheadings: first,the(literary)fashioningofthedebate,dispute,oraltercation;andsecond, the (strategic) choice of medium and genre for the conflict at hand. The first notionpertainstomattersofexpressioninspecificlanguagesandstyles,specific techniquesandproceduresofargumentation,referencestoexemplary models or writings,fromwhichquotationsweredrawninvariousconstructiveorde- structiveways,and–lastbutnotleast–theappropriationofearlier,classicalor

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