Niccolò Machiavelli counts among the most famous (and infamous)
political authors in the history of Western political thought,
primarily on account of his book the Prince. Before he wrote that
notorious treatise, however, he served for fourteen years as a
prominent and active civil administrator in the government of the
Republic of Florence. Removed from office in 1512, following a
take-over by the Medici dynasty that had ruled the city during much of
the fifteenth century, Machiavelli was incarcerated and tortured as a
result of unsubstantiated accusations of his involvement in a coup
plot. Soon after his release from prison, he composed the Prince,
which is generally seen to constitute the beginning of his career as a
political theorist as well as a comic playwright, poet and military
analyst of note. Yet little attention has been devoted to the large
body of writings-in the form of prose and poetry, as well as the
hundreds of pages of diplomatic and personal correspondence-that he
produced in the course of his public service. In an unprecedented
interpretation, The Rope and the Chains carefully examines the
neglected pre-Prince texts in order to frame his later theories. The
book reveals that Machiavelli's thought prior to the Prince was
largely conventional when judged by the standards of his day. At the
same time, it also demonstrates his dissatisfaction with the
intellectual worldview in which he was enmeshed. Machiavelli
“became” Machiavelli once liberated from the rope and the chains
by which centuries of tradition had constrained him.
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Machiavelli’s Early Thought and Its Transformations
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781793617255
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter