Gian francesco poggio bracciolini 11 february 80 30 october 1459, usually referred to simply as poggio bracciolini, was an italian scholar and an early renaissance humanist. Nov 20, 2011 out of a job, poggio turned to book hunting and began recovering invaluable works, like those by the roman rhetorician quintilian. Poggios chance finding lay what greenblatt, following lucretius himself, terms a historic swerve of massive proportions, propagated by such seminal and often heretical truth tellers as machiavelli, giordano bruno, and montaigne. Oct 02, 2011 poggio saw the manuscripts significance at once, presumably knowing of lucretius from jerome and ovid.
The swerve, by stephen greenblatt souvenir scribbles. These days, when the book is an endangered species, readers of the swerve should be grateful as well for greenblatts elegant. Greenblatt analyzes the poems subsequent impact on the development of the renaissance, the reformation, and modern science. Dec 18, 2011 would have surged up even if poggio bracciolini had not made his spectacular find in the gathering darkness of a monastic library. In his new book, the swerve, shakespeare scholar stephen greenblatt tells the story of an ancient poem and a manuscript explorer, and resurrects a time when people truly loved books. During the dark ages, many greek and roman manuscripts were forever lost. For the most part, their comments decry how greenblatt, perhaps the most widely known historicist critic, deploys almost the full barrage of oversimplistic caricatures of the middle ages that have been in circulation since poggio. Greenblatt treats the central narrative thread of the swerve, his engaging retelling of poggios discovery of the manuscript of lucretius, as an exemplary story of.
Page 86 it is a wonderful instance of his memory, that though he had been confined three hundred and forty days in a dark dungeon, where it was impossible for him to read, and where he must have daily suffered from the utmost anxiety of mind, yet he quoted so many learned writers in defence of his opinions, and supported his sentiments by the authority of so many doctors of the church, that. Nonetheless, so many people, across so many centuries, are indebted to him. Greenblatt tells the story of how poggio bracciolini, a 15thcentury papal emissary and obsessive book. Poggio waited years to get access to niccolos copy of on the nature of things. That book was the last surviving manuscript of an ancient roman philosophical epic, on the nature of things, by lucretiusa beautiful poem of the most. This 51page guide for the swerve by stephen greenblatt includes detailed chapter summaries and analysis covering 11 chapters, as well as several more indepth sections of expertwritten literary analysis.
Poggio served as scribe and secretary in the papal court, a place he cynically thought of as, the lie factory. How a renaissance book hunter kept a classic from disappearing. The book relates the story of poggio bracciolini, the former apostolic secretary to several popes, who became perhaps the. Jan 31, 2019 the swerve strings together the complex weave of religion, society, corruption, greed, immorality, greek philosophy, war, the lives of monasteries, monks, and libraries to tell the story. Out of a job, poggio turned to book hunting and began recovering invaluable works, like those by the roman rhetorician quintilian. When the new pope was installed, many of his colleagues returned to curia. Greenblatt tells the story of how poggio bracciolini, a 15thcentury papal emissary and obsessive book hunter, saved the last copy of the roman poet lucretius s on the nature of things on the nature of things from nearterminal neglect in a german monastery, thus reintroducing important ideas that sparked the modern age. Without the copyists and bookhunters like poggio bracciolini, these tiny textual remnants might have been all that was left of this visionary. It begins with a crisis in the catholic church and in the career of poggio bracciolini, who was personal secretary to john xxiii. The longlost book that launched the renaissance the author of will in the world finds the seeds of modern secularism in a book discovered in a. Poggio s chance finding lay what greenblatt, following lucretius himself, terms a historic swerve of massive proportions, propagated by such seminal and often heretical truth tellers as. Sep 28, 2011 the ideas in the swerve are tucked, cannily, inside a quest narrative. Poggio scours europe and finds many such manuscripts. The swerve, in fact, is two books, one deserving of an award, the other not.
The first book is an engaging literary detective story about an intrepid florentine bibliophile named poggio. How the world became modern was published in 2011 and describes how the rediscovery of an ancient poem launches the renaissance and helps shape the modern age. Poggio saw the manuscripts significance at once, presumably knowing of lucretius from jerome and ovid. This is the tale of poggio bracciolini, a 15th century book hunter, who rediscovered an ancient text by lucretius, on the nature of things. How the world became modern is a book by stephen greenblatt and winner of the 2012 pulitzer prize for general nonfiction and 2011 national book award for nonfiction. Sep 28, 2011 greenblatt treats the central narrative thread of the swerve, his engaging retelling of poggios discovery of the manuscript of lucretius, as an exemplary story of how the world became modern in. Lucretius was a passionate follower of the greek philosopher epicurus. This narrative is structured by following poggio bracciolini in his pursuits. The swerve strings together the complex weave of religion, society, corruption, greed, immorality, greek philosophy, war, the lives of monasteries, monks, and libraries to tell the story. The swerve is stephen greenblatts account of how on the nature of things was rescued from obscurity by poggio bracciolini, a vatican bureaucrat only a few fragments of his writings survive today. Some only survived because monks had libraries and spent their time copying even heretical works. Soon his friends were hailing him as the great restorer of.
Poggio s chance finding lay what greenblatt, following lucretius himself, terms a historic swerve of massive proportions, propagated by such seminal and often heretical truth tellers as machiavelli, giordano bruno, and montaigne. Winner of the 2012 pulitzer prize for nonfiction winner of the 2011 national book award for nonfiction. Lucretius himself was essentially an epicurean who saw the restrained seeking of pleasure as the highest good. In the swerve, stephen greenblatt is essentially making the argument that a poem changed the world. How the world became modern by stephen greenblatt is a narrative of the discovery of the old lucretius manuscript by poggio. But swerve is an intense, emotional telling of a true story, one with much at stake for all of us. Lucretius text on the nature of things and its rediscovery by poggio the florentine in the 1400s. Sep 11, 2011 a detail from the cover of swerve swerve.
It describes the ideas of an ancient sect, the epicureans, whose beliefs will overturn many of. Pocket editions of the latin text, with an italian translation, may be found in bracciolini 1983 and bracciolini 1995, while a good critical edition of an influential early french translation appears in duval and herichepradeau 2003. Poggio bracciolini bracciolini, poggio, 801459 books from the extended shelves. The first book is an engaging literary detective story about an intrepid florentine bibliophile named poggio braccionlini.
Poggio bracciolini renaissance and reformation oxford. If you love books and the history of ideas then you will want to read the swerve. The ideas that rooted the renaissance stephen greenblatt chronicles the unlikely discovery of lucretius poem on the nature of things by a. The swerve is one of those brilliant works of nonfiction thats so jampacked with ideas and stories it literally boggles the mind. Poggio bracciolini 801459 ce, a short, genial, cannily alert man. Page 78 it is a wonderful instance of his memory, that though he had been confined three hundred and forty days in a dark dungeon, where it was impossible for him to read, and where he must have daily suffered from the utmost anxiety of mind, yet he quoted so many learned writers in defence of his opinions, and supported his sentiments by the authority of so many doctors of the church, that. Dec 23, 2011 most of the swerve is devoted to this story of loss and retrieval. How the world became modern in new york journal of books. Greenblatt supplies throughout the swerve are tangy and exact. Winner of the 2012 pulitzer prize for nonfiction winner of the 2011 national book award for nonfiction one of the worlds most celebrated scholars, stephen greenblatt has crafted both an innovative work of history and a thrilling story of discovery, in which one manuscript, plucked from a thousand years of neglect, changed the course of human thought and made possible the world as we know it. While working in florence as a copyist of manuscripts, poggio. The longlost book that launched the renaissance the author of will in the world finds the seeds of modern secularism in a. Books by poggio bracciolini author of the facetiae or jocose.
Gian francesco poggio bracciolini italian scholar britannica. In 1417, poggio bracciolini discovers lucretius ancient poem, on the nature of things. 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. Sep 25, 2011 at the center of stephen greenblatts dazzling new book, the swerve. First, a thorough biography of the italian politician and humanist poggio braccilioni, who rose from a humble origin to become a papal secretary a powerbroker in the corrupt xv century vatican court, and, who, at the same time, driven by a passion for ancient books, uncovered, transcript and recovered the manuscript of on the nature of things. This poem had been lost for more than a thousand years and its ideas threatened contemporary views of science and human contentment. In poggios time, lucretius works were not well known on the nature of things is the only one to survive to modern times. He scoured the italian countryside for old books and with lucretius found a book that would influence thinkers. The swerve won the pulitzer prize, the national book award, and the lowell prize. The best modern critical edition of poggios collection of witty fables is pittaluga 2005. How the renaissance began is a book by stephen greenblatt and winner of the 2012 pulitzer prize for general nonfiction and 2011 national book award for nonfiction. At the center of the swerve is the forgotten story of a 15thcentury italian book hunter named poggio bracciolini, who set out on several expeditions throughout monasteries on the continent and.
Poggio bracciolinis most popular book is the facetiae or jocose tales of poggio, volume 2. Stephen greenblatts critical swerve the boston globe. Renowned historian stephen greenblatts works shoot to the top of the new york times bestseller list. How the world became modern by stephen greenblatt, is an intellectual romp. He was responsible for rediscovering and recovering many classical latin manuscripts, mostly decaying and forgotten in german, swiss, and french monastic libraries. Books by poggio bracciolini author of the facetiae or. Most of the swerve is devoted to this story of loss and retrieval. In the swerve, greenblatt elegantly chronicles the history of discovery that brought lucretius poem out of the musty shadows of obscurity into an early modern world ripe for his ideas.
Stephen greenblatts the swerve racked up prizes and. Poggio bracciolini has 53 books on goodreads with 178 ratings. Stephen greenblatts the swerve racked up prizes and completely misled you about the middle ages. It tells the tale of the creation of roman lucretiuss revolutionary, nonconformist poem on the nature of things, its ties to epicurus and epicureanism, its loss for centuries and then finding in the 15th century by a fascinating book hunter, its gradual dissemination and then growing influence on artists. Poggios chance finding lay what greenblatt, following lucretius himself, terms a historic swerve of massive proportions, propagated by such seminal and often heretical truth tellers as.
The ideas that rooted the renaissance stephen greenblatt chronicles the unlikely discovery of lucretius poem on the nature of things by a 15thcentury italian book hunter. Jul 20, 2016 stephen greenblatts the swerve racked up prizes and completely misled you about the middle ages. At the center of this marvelous tale stands an avid book hunter, skilled manuscript copyist and notary. The ideas in the swerve are tucked, cannily, inside a quest narrative. What they knew was from small references by his contemporaries including cicero, ovid, and virgil. Another problem with the swerve, which is related to the volume of information it contains, is the time lime. Librarything is a cataloging and social networking site for booklovers. Discover book depositorys huge selection of poggio bracciolini books online.
The book relates the story of poggio bracciolini, the former apostolic secretary to several popes, who became perhaps. Sep 26, 2011 the swerve is stephen greenblatts account of how on the nature of things was rescued from obscurity by poggio bracciolini, a vatican bureaucrat only a few fragments of his writings survive today. And the further you read, the more astonishing it becomes. But throughout this profusion of riches, it seems to me, a moral emerges. In 1417, papal secretary poggio bracciolini sets out on a search for the lost books of the roman empire. He had a copy made and sent to a friend in florence, who copied it anew. The swerve follows poggio bracciolini, a 15thcentury italian employee of the pope, a humanist, and an avid book collector. At its gates, in the first weeks of 1417, arrived an itinerant florentine scholar by the name of poggio. Sep 04, 2012 the swerve is one of those brilliant works of nonfiction thats so jampacked with ideas and stories it literally boggles the mind. Its return to circulation altered the entire course of history, and greenblatt writes about this shift in an accessible, meaningful way. The most complete statement of epicureanism that has survived is a poem, on the nature of things, written by the roman poet lucretius.
It was poggio bracciolini a short, genial avid book hunter who discovered the manuscript and ordered it to be copied many times. Until the narration settles on the life of the genial poggio bracciolini in 15th century italy, the first 14 of the narration repeatedly shifts between antiquity, middle ages, and renaissance, making the sequence of events rather. Gian francesco poggio bracciolini, italian humanist and calligrapher, foremost among scholars of the early renaissance as a rediscoverer of lost, forgotten, or neglected classical latin manuscripts in the monastic libraries of europe. In that year, the italian humanist scholar and bookhunter poggio bracciolini found a ninthcentury manuscript of the ancient poem in the library.
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