A Local Habitation and a Name(English, Hardcover, Ascoli Albert Russell)

A Local Habitation and a Name(English, Hardcover, Ascoli Albert Russell)

  • Ascoli Albert Russell
Publisher:Fordham Univ PressISBN 13: 9780823234288ISBN 10: 0823234282

Paperback & Hardcover deals ―

Amazon IndiaGOFlipkart ₹ 13086SnapdealGOSapnaOnlineGOJain Book AgencyGOBooks Wagon₹352Book ChorGOCrosswordGODC BooksGO

e-book & Audiobook deals ―

Amazon India GOGoogle Play Books ₹88Audible GO

* Price may vary from time to time.

* GO = We're not able to fetch the price (please check manually visiting the website).

Know about the book -

A Local Habitation and a Name(English, Hardcover, Ascoli Albert Russell) is written by Ascoli Albert Russell and published by Fordham University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0823234282 (ISBN 10) and 9780823234288 (ISBN 13).

Focusing on major authors and problems from the Italian fourteenth and sixteenth centuries, from Petrarch and Boccaccio to Machiavelli, Ariosto and Tasso, A Local Habitation and a Name examines the unstable dialectic of "reality" and "imagination," as well as of "history" and "literature." Albert Ascoli identifies and interprets the ways in which literary texts are shaped by and serve the purposes of multiple, intertwined historical discourses and circumstances, and he equally probes the function of such texts in constructing, interpreting, critiquing, and effacing the histories in which they are embedded. Throughout, he poses the theoretical and methodological question of how formal analysis and literary forms can at once resist and further the historicist enterprise. Along the way Ascoli interrogates the mechanisms of historical periodization that have governed for so long our study of what is sometimes called the "Renaissance," sometimes the early modern period. He also addresses the period's own unstable version of the literature/history opposition, the place of gendered discourse in the construction of historical narratives (and vice versa), the elaborate formal strategies by which poets and intellectuals negotiate their relations to power, and, finally, the way in which proper names (of authors, works, and exemplary characters) serve as points of negotiation between individual identity and social order in the Renaissance. The book brings to culmination two decades of a major scholar's thinking about some of the most important figures and questions that shaped the Renaissance, with emphasis on the question of history, both the historical context of literature and the writing of literary history.