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Dive into the research topics where W. Scott Blanchard is active.

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Featured researches published by W. Scott Blanchard.


The Eighteenth Century | 1997

Scholars' bedlam : Menippean satire in the Renaissance

Richard Harp; W. Scott Blanchard

This study acknowledges the influence of certain classical authors, especially Lucian, on the revival of Menippean form in the Renaissance, and also seeks to explain the popularity of the Menippean satire by other means. Among the works discussed are Rabelaiss Tiers livre, Nashes Lenten Stuff, and Burtons Anatomy of Melancholy.


The European Legacy | 2015

Leonardo Bruni and the Poetics of Sovereignty

W. Scott Blanchard

Abstract Leonardo Bruni’s well-known oration, the Laudatio Florentinae urbis, has long stood at the center of discussions on the emergence of the modern republican state. Recent historiographical trends have emphasized the degree to which Bruni’s oration represents a propagandistic attempt both to portray Florence as a territorial power of Northern Italy keen to impose its sovereign authority on neighboring polities and as a republic intent on fashioning an image of itself as a popular sovereignty. It is in this second element of Bruni’s oration that we can discover his rhetorical purposes: he needed to give a distorted image of Florence as enjoying “popular” rule precisely because Florence was in fact moving in the opposite direction towards a more oligarchic concentration of political authority. The essay investigates the changes contemplated in revisions to Florence’s juridical codes at precisely the time of the oration’s composition, suggesting that when these two sources are juxtaposed, Bruni’s oration appears as a strongly ideological literary work the rhetorical gestures of which camouflage the actual historical and legal developments of Florence’s political life in the early fifteenth century.


South Atlantic Review | 1996

Scholars' Bedlam: Menippean Satire in the Renaissance

Kendrick Prewitt; W. Scott Blanchard

This study acknowledges the influence of certain classical authors, especially Lucian, on the revival of Menippean form in the Renaissance, and also seeks to explain the popularity of the Menippean satire by other means. Among the works discussed are Rabelaiss Tiers livre, Nashes Lenten Stuff, and Burtons Anatomy of Melancholy.


Renaissance Studies | 2000

The negative dialectic of Lorenzo Valla: a study in the pathology of opposition

W. Scott Blanchard


Renaissance Quarterly | 2007

Patrician Sages and the Humanist Cynic: Francesco Filelfo and the Ethics of World Citizenship

W. Scott Blanchard


Renaissance Quarterly | 2006

Early Renaissance Invective and the Controversies of Antonio da Rho (review)

W. Scott Blanchard


Renaissance Quarterly | 2015

Epistolarum Iuvenilium Libri Octo Petri Candidi Decembrii. Federico Petrucci, ed. Premio Tesi Dottorato 33. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2013. 510 pp. €15.90.

W. Scott Blanchard


New Literary History | 2015

Forms of Power, Forms of Life: Agamben's Franciscan Turn

W. Scott Blanchard


Renaissance Quarterly | 2014

Antonio Urceo Codro.Sermones (I–IV). Ed. Loredana Chines and Andrea Severi. Biblioteca Medievale 144. Rome: Carocci editore, 2013. 458 pp. €48. ISBN: 978-88-430-7025-1.

W. Scott Blanchard


Renaissance Quarterly | 2014

Philip Ford and Andrew Taylor, eds.The Early Modern Cultures of Neo-Latin Drama. Supplementa Humanistica Lovaniensia 32. Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2013. 224 pp. €49.50. ISBN: 978-90-5867-926-0.

W. Scott Blanchard

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