9780691032627-0691032629-Between Friends : Discourses of Power and Desire in the Machiavelli - Vettori Letters of 1513 - 1515

Between Friends : Discourses of Power and Desire in the Machiavelli - Vettori Letters of 1513 - 1515

ISBN-13: 9780691032627
ISBN-10: 0691032629
Edition: First Edition
Author: John M. Najemy
Publication date: 1993
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Format: Hardcover 380 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780691032627
ISBN-10: 0691032629
Edition: First Edition
Author: John M. Najemy
Publication date: 1993
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Format: Hardcover 380 pages

Summary

Between Friends : Discourses of Power and Desire in the Machiavelli - Vettori Letters of 1513 - 1515 (ISBN-13: 9780691032627 and ISBN-10: 0691032629), written by authors John M. Najemy, was published by Princeton University Press in 1993. With an overall rating of 4.5 stars, it's a notable title among other Italy (European History) books. You can easily purchase or rent Between Friends : Discourses of Power and Desire in the Machiavelli - Vettori Letters of 1513 - 1515 (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Italy books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Between Friends offers the first extended close reading of the most famous epistolary dialogue of the Renaissance, the letters exchanged from 1513 to 1515 by Niccolò Machiavelli and Francesco Vettori. John Najemy reveals the literary richness and theoretical tensions of the correspondence, the crucial importance of the dialogue with Vettori in Machiavelli's emergence as a writer and political theorist, and the close but complex relationship between the letters and Machiavelli's major works on politics. Unlike previous and mostly fragmentary treatments of the correspondence, this book reads the letters as a continuously developing, collaborative text in which problems of language and interpretation gradually emerge as the critical issues.

Najemy argues that Vettori's skeptical reaction to Machiavelli's first letters on politics provoked Machiavelli into a defense of language's power to represent the world, a notion that soon became the underlying assumption of The Prince. Later, and largely through an apparently whimsical exchange of letters on love and the foibles of eros, Vettori led Machiavelli to confront the power of desire in language, which opened the way for a different, essentially poetic, approach to writing about politics that surfaces for the first time in the pages of the Discourses on Livy.

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