Peace and Negotiation : Strategies for Coexistence in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance

Peace was far from a pale, static concept - a simple lack of violence - in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Rather, it was at times constructed as a rich and complex, positive and dynamic ideal. The thirteen articles in this volume cover a broad range of disciplines, times, and geographical areas an...

Description complète

Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Autres auteurs : Wolfthal Diane (Éditeur scientifique)
Format : Livre
Langue : anglais
Titre complet : Peace and Negotiation : Strategies for Coexistence in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance / [édité par] Diane Wolfthal
Publié : Turnhout : Brepols (éditions) , 2000
Collection : Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (Online) ; 4
Accès en ligne : Accès Nantes Université
Sujets :
Documents associés : Autre format: Peace and negotiation
Description
Résumé : Peace was far from a pale, static concept - a simple lack of violence - in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Rather, it was at times constructed as a rich and complex, positive and dynamic ideal. The thirteen articles in this volume cover a broad range of disciplines, times, and geographical areas and explore strategies that were used in the past to resolve conflict and attain peace. They examine events, texts, and images that date from the fifth through the sixteenth centuries, and their authors focus not only on Western Europe, but also on Scandinavia, the Caucausus, and Egypt. This volume rests on the assumption that peace covers a spectrum of situations that connects the personal and the political. Therefore, the papers presented here examine not only how nations negotiated peace, but also how individuals did. Similarly, although several essays spotlight those in the seat of power, others explore the situation of those lower on the social hierarchy. Our views about peace and conflict, as this collection makes clear, are shaped in part by the mentalités of the past. Although some peacemaking strategies may be unacceptable to us today - forced marriages and conversions, for example - we can learn from other strategies how to transcend or modify various modes of antagonistic thinking.
Notes : Notice rédigée d'après la consultation du 2011-04-06
L'impression du document génère 265 p.
Titre provenant de l'écran d'accueil
Historique des publications : Numérisation de l'édition de Turnhout : Brepols, 2000
Configuration requise : Navigateur Internet ; lecteur de fichiers PDF
Bibliographie : Notes bibliogr. Index
ISBN : 978-2-503-53695-8