The soul of brutes

"Civilization and Barbarism" resurrects a sixteenth-century debate between two thinkers in Spain about the humanness, or lack thereof, of Native Americans, and highlights the influence of classical thinkers, from Herodotus to Aristotle, and the iterations and interpretations through which...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Ginzburg, Carlo, 1939- autor (autor)
Formato: Libro
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Calcutta : Seagull Books [2022]
Colección:Italian list
Materias:
Ver en Universidad de Navarra:https://innopac.unav.es/record=b47544934*spi
Descripción
Sumario:"Civilization and Barbarism" resurrects a sixteenth-century debate between two thinkers in Spain about the humanness, or lack thereof, of Native Americans, and highlights the influence of classical thinkers, from Herodotus to Aristotle, and the iterations and interpretations through which their writings have traversed down to the Cinquecento. In "The Soul of Brutes" Ginzburg traces the genealogy of the debate on the rationality of animals and the limits of their imagination, from Plutarch and Aristotle to sixteenth-century thinkers like Pietro Pomponazzi and Girolamo Rorario. Following Montaigne, he provokes, are we to beasts as they seem to us? In "Calvino, Manzoni and the Grey Zone," Carlo Ginzburg pithily writes about the mental dialogue between Holocaust survivor Primo Levi and two Italians who profoundly influenced Levi's search for these "unexplored pockets of exception"--his contemporary Italo Calvino and the nineteenth-century novelist and philosopher Alessandro Manzoni. And finally, in "Schema and Bias", he probes whether the historian can clearly see into the past, peering through the layers of bias, which include their own prejudices, or if relativism is the only path."--Seagull Books
Descripción Física:119 páginas ; 19 cm
Bibliografía:Incluye referencias bibliográficas (páginas 105-119)
ISBN:9781803090726