Family, Vocation, and Humanism in the Italian Renaissance
The first generations of Italian Humanists, which included Petrarch, Boccaccio, Giovanni Conversini, and Leon Battista Alberti, wrestled with the crisis of vocational choice amid struggles with their natal and conjugal families. Instead of following their fathers into conventional and reliably stable professions, they instead chose a literary and scholarly path not yet recognized as a viable profession. The inchoate nature of their careers, together with their propensity to write about themselves, created a unique setting for the emergence of modern notions of secular vocation. In this study, George McClure analyzes the rich residue of humanist writings – letters, autobiographies, dialogues, polemics, and fictional works – that defined the values of a literary life against the traditional models of monk, priest, physician, lawyer, or merchant. Collectively, they serve as the first substantive discourse on the moral and psychological meaning of work, which helped to lay the foundation for a general concept of secular vocation.
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Family, Vocation, and Humanism in the Italian Renaissance
The first generations of Italian Humanists, which included Petrarch, Boccaccio, Giovanni Conversini, and Leon Battista Alberti, wrestled with the crisis of vocational choice amid struggles with their natal and conjugal families. Instead of following their fathers into conventional and reliably stable professions, they instead chose a literary and scholarly path not yet recognized as a viable profession. The inchoate nature of their careers, together with their propensity to write about themselves, created a unique setting for the emergence of modern notions of secular vocation. In this study, George McClure analyzes the rich residue of humanist writings – letters, autobiographies, dialogues, polemics, and fictional works – that defined the values of a literary life against the traditional models of monk, priest, physician, lawyer, or merchant. Collectively, they serve as the first substantive discourse on the moral and psychological meaning of work, which helped to lay the foundation for a general concept of secular vocation.
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Family, Vocation, and Humanism in the Italian Renaissance

Family, Vocation, and Humanism in the Italian Renaissance

by George McClure
Family, Vocation, and Humanism in the Italian Renaissance

Family, Vocation, and Humanism in the Italian Renaissance

by George McClure

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$130.00 
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Overview

The first generations of Italian Humanists, which included Petrarch, Boccaccio, Giovanni Conversini, and Leon Battista Alberti, wrestled with the crisis of vocational choice amid struggles with their natal and conjugal families. Instead of following their fathers into conventional and reliably stable professions, they instead chose a literary and scholarly path not yet recognized as a viable profession. The inchoate nature of their careers, together with their propensity to write about themselves, created a unique setting for the emergence of modern notions of secular vocation. In this study, George McClure analyzes the rich residue of humanist writings – letters, autobiographies, dialogues, polemics, and fictional works – that defined the values of a literary life against the traditional models of monk, priest, physician, lawyer, or merchant. Collectively, they serve as the first substantive discourse on the moral and psychological meaning of work, which helped to lay the foundation for a general concept of secular vocation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781009629270
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 01/31/2026
Pages: 222
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 1.50(h) x 9.50(d)

About the Author

George McClure is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Alabama. He is the  author of several books on the aspects of Italian Renaissance and early modern civilization, most recently, Doubting the Divine in Early Modern Europe.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. Petrarch's father, brother, son, and the literary life; 3. Boccaccio and narratives of filial freedom; 4. Giovanni conversini's search for vocation: between natal and conjugal family; 5. Leon Battista alberti and the merchant family; 6. Conclusion: family and the humanist origins of secular vocation; Bibliography.
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