The study: the inner life of Renaissance libraries

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Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Publication Date:
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Language:
English

Description

"With the advent of the printing press in Europe, the possibility of assembling a personal library became more and more attainable for the cultural elite. In this book, Andrew Hui traces the historical development of the Renaissance studiolo, a personal study and library, from Petrarch to Montaigne, considering literary representations of the studiolo in Rabelais, Cervantes, Shakespeare, and Marlowe as well as its presence in the visual arts. He explores the ways in which Renaissance writers and scholarsengaged with these personal libraries, both real and imaginary, as places for research and refuge, and the impact of their legacy on writers of our own age, such as Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino. Hui is interested in how these workspaces shaped theinterior lives of their occupants, and how the bookish sanctuary they offered was cast as both a remedy and a poison for the soul. Painters of the period, for example, depicted such Biblical figures as the Virgin Mary and St. Jerome in studies surroundedby books, and some writers extolled the studiolo as a space for salutary self-reflection. But other writers suggested that too much time spent reading and amassing books could lead to bibliomania: it drove Don Quixote to madness, Faustus to perdition, Prospero to exile. Individual chapters focus on the invention of the studiolo as seen through Federico da Montefeltro's Gubbio Studiolo and Raphael's School of Athens; Rabelais's parodies of erudition and classification; the transformation of private study into self-conscious spectacle in The Tempest; and more. While primarily drawing on works from Renaissance Europe, the chapters range across time and geography, incorporating a more global and comparative approach by drawing on texts from the classical tradition of China. Throughout the book, Hui weaves in accounts of his own life with books and libraries, arguing that to study the history of reading, scholars must also become aware of their own history of readings"--

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ISBN:
9780691243320
9780691243337

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Grouping Information

Grouped Work ID28361b4d-feb6-6fb0-b2d3-b295898d9398
Grouping Titlestudy the inner life of renaissance libraries
Grouping Authorandrew hui
Grouping Categorybook
Grouping LanguageEnglish (eng)
Last Grouping Update2025-09-11 15:53:06PM
Last Indexed2025-09-15 03:15:38AM

Solr Fields

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Hui, Andrew, 1980-
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hoopla digital
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Hui, Andrew
display_description
"With the advent of the printing press in Europe, the possibility of assembling a personal library became more and more attainable for the cultural elite. In this book, Andrew Hui traces the historical development of the Renaissance studiolo, a personal study and library, from Petrarch to Montaigne, considering literary representations of the studiolo in Rabelais, Cervantes, Shakespeare, and Marlowe as well as its presence in the visual arts. He explores the ways in which Renaissance writers and scholarsengaged with these personal libraries, both real and imaginary, as places for research and refuge, and the impact of their legacy on writers of our own age, such as Jorge Luis Borges and Italo Calvino. Hui is interested in how these workspaces shaped theinterior lives of their occupants, and how the bookish sanctuary they offered was cast as both a remedy and a poison for the soul. Painters of the period, for example, depicted such Biblical figures as the Virgin Mary and St. Jerome in studies surroundedby books, and some writers extolled the studiolo as a space for salutary self-reflection. But other writers suggested that too much time spent reading and amassing books could lead to bibliomania: it drove Don Quixote to madness, Faustus to perdition, Prospero to exile. Individual chapters focus on the invention of the studiolo as seen through Federico da Montefeltro's Gubbio Studiolo and Raphael's School of Athens; Rabelais's parodies of erudition and classification; the transformation of private study into self-conscious spectacle in The Tempest; and more. While primarily drawing on works from Renaissance Europe, the chapters range across time and geography, incorporating a more global and comparative approach by drawing on texts from the classical tradition of China. Throughout the book, Hui weaves in accounts of his own life with books and libraries, arguing that to study the history of reading, scholars must also become aware of their own history of readings"--
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id
28361b4d-feb6-6fb0-b2d3-b295898d9398
isbn
9780691243320
9780691243337
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Year
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9780691243320
publishDate
2024
2025
publisher
Princeton University Press
recordtype
grouped_work
subject_facet
ART / History / Renaissance
Architecture
Bibliomania -- History
Bibliophilia -- History
Books and reading
Books and reading -- History
Electronic books
Europe
History
Humanists -- Books and reading -- History -- To 1500
LITERARY CRITICISM / Books & Reading
Learning and scholarship -- History
Literary criticism
Private libraries -- History
Private libraries -- History -- 1400-1600
Renaissance
Social history
title_display
The study : the inner life of Renaissance libraries
title_full
The Study : The Inner Life Of Renaissance Libraries [electronic resource] / Andrew Hui
The study : the inner life of Renaissance libraries / Andrew Hui
title_short
The study
title_sub
the inner life of Renaissance libraries
topic_facet
ART / History / Renaissance
Architecture
Bibliomania
Bibliophilia
Books and reading
Electronic books
History
Humanists
LITERARY CRITICISM / Books & Reading
Learning and scholarship
Private libraries
Renaissance
Social history

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record_details

Bib IdFormatFormat CategoryEditionLanguagePublisherPublication DatePhysical DescriptionAbridged
hoopla:MWT18383013eBookeBookEnglishPrinceton University Press20241 online resource (336 pages)
ils:.b27844195BookBooksEnglishPrinceton University Press[2025]xiii, 303 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm

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