Compartir
Networking Europe and New Communities of Interpretation (1400-1600) (en Inglés)
Hoogvliet, Margriet ; Fernandez Chaves, Manuel F. ; Perez Garcia, Rafael M. (Autor)
·
Brepols Publishers
· Tapa Dura
Networking Europe and New Communities of Interpretation (1400-1600) (en Inglés) - Hoogvliet, Margriet ; Fernandez Chaves, Manuel F. ; Perez Garcia, Rafael M.
Libro Nuevo
Importado
*
Envío: 16 a 21 días háb.
$ 131.45
* Costos de importación y 13% IVA incluídos en el precio ✅
Origen: Reino Unido
Costos de importación incluídos en el precio ✅
Se enviará desde nuestra bodega entre el
Jueves 02 de Abril y el
Jueves 09 de Abril.
Lo recibirás en cualquier lugar de El Salvador entre 1 y 3 días hábiles luego del envío.
Reseña del libro "Networking Europe and New Communities of Interpretation (1400-1600) (en Inglés)"
Long-distance ties connecting Europeans from all geographical corners of the continent during the fifteenth and sixteenth century facilitated the sharing of religious texts, books, iconography, ideas, and practices. The contributions to this book aim to reconstruct these European networks of knowledge exchange by exploring how religious ideas and strategies of transformation 'travelled' and were shared in European and transatlantic cultural spaces. In order to come to a better understanding of Europe-wide processes of religious culture and religious change, the chapters focus on the agency of the laity in 'new communities of interpretation', instead of intellectual elites, the aristocracy, and religious institutions. These new communities of interpretation were often formed by an urban laity active in politics, finance, and commerce. The agency of religious literatures in the European vernaculars in processes of religious purification, reform, and innovation during the long fifteenth century is still largely underestimated. 'Networking Europe' aims to step away from studying 'national' textual production and consumption by approaching these topics instead from a European and interconnected perspective. The contributions to this book explore late medieval and early modern networks connecting people and transporting texts following three main axes of investigation: 'European Connections', 'Exiles, Diasporas, and Migrants', and 'Mobility and Dissemination'.