Daalder's review of "The Idea of the Renaissance" by William Kerrigan and Gordon Braden (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989)
The Renaissance culture believed that man through free will strives for the infinite discerned by di...
Hutson\u27s study of the impact of humanism on male friendship and the anxieties in the changing nat...
Review of H.M. Richmond's book "Puritans and Libertines: Anglo-French Literary Relations in the Refo...
Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare (Stephen Greenblatt) (Reviewed by Louis Adrian...
Gordon Braden, Petrarchan Love and the Continental Renaissance. New Haven and London: Yale Universit...
There was no Renaissance for women, at least not in the Renaissance,” wrote the twentieth century fe...
The classic interpretation of the Renaissance explains the movement as the first chapter of modern h...
Review of Douglas Bruster's book, 'Drama and the Market in the Age of Shakespeare' (Cambridge Studie...
Review of Daryl Palmer's book "Hospitable Performances: Dramatic Genre and Cultural Practices in Ear...
Modernity, a break with the dark ages and a new confidence in human self-determination, has long bee...
A favourable review of Macdonald P. Jackson's book, "Defining Shakespeare: 'Pericles' as Test Case",...
Review of the English edition of Manfredo Tafuri's Ricerca del rinascimento (1992), translated by Da...
"The need for a substantial and satisfactory treatment of the Renaissance and Reformation, embodying...
This article discusses the meaning of the term Renaissance and its application to the cultural and l...
Review of Women in Renaissance and Early Modern Europe edited by Christine Meek (Four Courts Press, ...
The Renaissance culture believed that man through free will strives for the infinite discerned by di...
Hutson\u27s study of the impact of humanism on male friendship and the anxieties in the changing nat...
Review of H.M. Richmond's book "Puritans and Libertines: Anglo-French Literary Relations in the Refo...
Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare (Stephen Greenblatt) (Reviewed by Louis Adrian...
Gordon Braden, Petrarchan Love and the Continental Renaissance. New Haven and London: Yale Universit...
There was no Renaissance for women, at least not in the Renaissance,” wrote the twentieth century fe...
The classic interpretation of the Renaissance explains the movement as the first chapter of modern h...
Review of Douglas Bruster's book, 'Drama and the Market in the Age of Shakespeare' (Cambridge Studie...
Review of Daryl Palmer's book "Hospitable Performances: Dramatic Genre and Cultural Practices in Ear...
Modernity, a break with the dark ages and a new confidence in human self-determination, has long bee...
A favourable review of Macdonald P. Jackson's book, "Defining Shakespeare: 'Pericles' as Test Case",...
Review of the English edition of Manfredo Tafuri's Ricerca del rinascimento (1992), translated by Da...
"The need for a substantial and satisfactory treatment of the Renaissance and Reformation, embodying...
This article discusses the meaning of the term Renaissance and its application to the cultural and l...
Review of Women in Renaissance and Early Modern Europe edited by Christine Meek (Four Courts Press, ...
The Renaissance culture believed that man through free will strives for the infinite discerned by di...
Hutson\u27s study of the impact of humanism on male friendship and the anxieties in the changing nat...
Review of H.M. Richmond's book "Puritans and Libertines: Anglo-French Literary Relations in the Refo...