Neo-Latin and the Humanities
Auteur : Timothy Kircher, Luc Deitz
Date de publication : 2014
Éditeur : Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies
Nombre de pages : 289
Résumé du livre
In their range and breadth, the essays in this collection illustrate the cultural force of Neo-Latin in Early Modern Europe. Neo-Latin was a vehicle for the translation of other languages; it united people across boundaries of ethnicity and nation; it carried with it the legacy of classical Latinity; it provided insight into religious doctrine; it shaped the development of early modern vernaculars; and, not least, it offered both style and substance to the evolving practice of Renaissance literary and textual criticism. To the degree that the humanities recognize their roots in the fifteenth-century studia humanitatis the fields of grammar, rhetoric, history, poetry, and moral philosophy they are also conscious of how these fields flourish in the domain of Latin culture.--