Melancholy of Power
Perception of Tyranny in European Political Culture of the 16th Century
Abstract
The book discusses how the most severe abuses of political power, traditionally termed from the ancient times as ‘tyranny’, were presented in 16th century political philosophy, propaganda, and literature in Italy, France, England, Scotland, German countries, and Poland-Lithuania. Using a unique interdisciplinary methodology, the book is both timeless and timely as it demonstrates various approaches of acknowledged Renaissance intellectuals to the problem of tyranny and how best to avoid or fight it. The author consciously avoids categories of the classic history of ideas or political thought and instead reveals broader intellectual and cultural connections in the perception of tyranny in the 16th century and its impact on modern debates on different dangers of political abuses of power.
Keywords
16th; Century; Civil resistance; Culture; European; Kakolewski; Melancholy; Niccolò Machiavelli; Perception; Political; Political philosophy; Power; Problem; Reformation; Renaissance; Thomas More; Tyranny; TyranyDOI
10.3726/b18167ISBN
9783631849514, 9783631849941, 9783631849958, 9783631846957, 9783631849514Publisher website
https://www.peterlang.com/Publication date and place
Bern, 2021Series
Studies in History, Memory and Politics, 41Classification
History