A Great and Wretched City: Promise and Failure in Machiavelli's Florentine Political Thought

A Great and Wretched City: Promise and Failure in Machiavelli's Florentine Political Thought

by Mark Jurdjevic
A Great and Wretched City: Promise and Failure in Machiavelli's Florentine Political Thought

A Great and Wretched City: Promise and Failure in Machiavelli's Florentine Political Thought

by Mark Jurdjevic

Hardcover

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Overview

Like many inhabitants of booming metropolises, Machiavelli alternated between love and hate for his native city. He often wrote scathing remarks about Florentine political myopia, corruption, and servitude, but also wrote about Florence with pride, patriotism, and confident hope of better times. Despite the alternating tones of sarcasm and despair he used to describe Florentine affairs, Machiavelli provided a stubbornly persistent sense that his city had all the materials and potential necessary for a wholesale, triumphant, and epochal political renewal. As he memorably put it, Florence was "truly a great and wretched city."

Mark Jurdjevic focuses on the Florentine dimension of Machiavelli's political thought, revealing new aspects of his republican convictions. Through The Prince, Discourses, correspondence, and, most substantially, Florentine Histories, Jurdjevic examines Machiavelli's political career and relationships to the republic and the Medici. He shows that significant and as yet unrecognized aspects of Machiavelli's political thought were distinctly Florentine in inspiration, content, and purpose. From a new perspective and armed with new arguments, A Great and Wretched City reengages the venerable debate about Machiavelli's relationship to Renaissance republicanism. Dispelling the myth that Florentine politics offered Machiavelli only negative lessons, Jurdjevic argues that his contempt for the city's shortcomings was a direct function of his considerable estimation of its unrealized political potential.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674725461
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 03/10/2014
Series: I Tatti Studies in Italian Renaissance History , #13
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Mark Jurdjevic is Associate Professor of History at Glendon College, York University.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Florentine Question 1

1 The Savonarolan Lens 16

2 Roman Doubts 53

3 Nobles and Noble Culture in the Florentine Histories 81

4 A New View of the People 103

5 The Albizzi Regime in the Florentine Histories 132

6 The Virtues and Vices of Medici Power in the Florentine Histories 149

7 The Failure of Florentine Institutions 179

Conclusion: Machiavelli's Republican Realism 206

Notes 217

References 273

Acknowledgments 285

Index 289

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