Words and Deeds, Stasis and Change: New Directions in Florentine Devotion Around 1500 |
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Authors: | Nicholas A. Eckstein |
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Affiliation: | University of Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | Members of Renaissance Italian confraternities spoke an official language that emphasized stability and permanence rather than change, a fact which can obscure the precise relationship between the culture of organized lay devotion and events in society as a whole. Examining four miraculous cults that achieved prominence in Florence around 1500, this essay argues that, far from their being static or conservative organizations, confraternities exemplify major changes transforming Florentine society at this time. The representations of class, wealth, gender, and age that emerge from the analysis help to problematize and complicate developments that otherwise appear as overly simplified, teleological trends. |
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