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Are you ready for the Second Renaissance?
#1
If you believe in the synchronicity (sorry, Sting!) of the S&H "small cycle" with Prabhat Sarkar's "grand cycle" as I do, well then you better get ready for it:

https://www.newstatesman.com/beauty-terr...ve-history

Breaking the Renaissance myth
Culture and the universal genius were not the only things to thrive in this supposed golden age – so too did slavery and warfare.
[Image: rowan_williams_headshot.jpg]



We still use the word “medieval” as a term of opprobrium: all sorts of things, from Islamist terrorism to faulty plumbing, are described as such when we want to signal a range of negative aspects. Something “medieval” is archaic, life-denying, sub-rational, obstinately ill-informed or incompetent, and so on. And by contrast, “renaissance” is usually a sunnier word. It evokes exuberance and creativity, intellectual freshness. A “renaissance man” (and it usually is a man) is someone endowed with an almost superhuman galaxy of qualities and skills.

As many scholars have pointed out, this odd bit of chronological snobbery is largely a 19th-century creation, from the days when the Renaissance was seen as the precursor of the Age of Reason, the moment somewhere around the end of the 15th and the beginning of the 16th century which saw the beginnings of Western civilisation’s liberation from dogma and bigotry. It is not news for historians that the story is more complex than this – or that it was also a period (particularly in Italy) of ceaseless and destructive warfare.


The publishers of Catherine Fletcher’s book have described it as an “alternative history of the Italian Renaissance”, but it is in fact a finely-written, engaging and clear essay in rather straightforward narrative history. It is none the worse for that, but is it really the case that we have failed to notice the “stranger and darker” side of Italian politics in the late 15th and early 16th centuries, as they suggest?
Professor Fletcher’s introductory chapter quite rightly notes that we are familiar enough with the stereotype of violent and corrupt machinations in Italian courts of the period (thanks to historical soaps about the Borgias and the Tudors), and that we need to penetrate more fully those systemic aspects of the society that colluded with or promoted slavery, sexual exploitation and the like. This book succeeds admirably in highlighting some of the features and figures of the period that have indeed slipped below (or never been spotted on) the radar.


Fletcher is particularly good, for example, on the initially surprising fact that women were more likely to wield political influence in princely states than in republics (think of the formidable figures of Lucrezia Borgia or Isabella d’Este). Elections in republics reflected classical prototypes that gave no public role to women. Elective rule typically produced a whole cohort of male leaders, in contrast to the princely state where a ruler’s spouse was expected to pick up the reins when her husband was away at war. Princely and aristocratic wives who ran their husband’s domain in their absence or after their death constitute a formidable cohort of influential rulers.


More broadly, the opportunities offered by war are a major theme in Fletcher’s narrative: we learn a great deal about the developments in military technology that changed the face of conflict in Italy over the period covered by this book. Fletcher traces very skilfully the way in which the creation of more sophisticated firearms for soldiers encouraged greater pay differentials, which placed some strain on small Italian states heavily dependent on mercenary troops for their perennial conflicts over territorial advantage and dynastic security.


This, in its turn, increased the attractions for Italian states of searching for powerful foreign allies who could afford standing armies of their own and were only too eager to go in search of power and profit in Italy. One of the most important shifts in Italian politics between the relatively peaceful situation in the mid-15th century and the blood-soaked chaos of the first half of the 16th, is the scale of foreign intervention. This began with the French attempt to secure the throne of Naples in the mid 1490s, when the ruler of Milan and the Pope encouraged the French king (Charles VIII) to supplant a Neapolitan monarch to whom they were hostile. It was a fateful start to decades of opportunistic foreign involvement in local Italian conflicts.


Italy’s political history in the Middle Ages had seen a fair amount of this already, especially in the conflict between pro-papal states or groups and the supporters of the Holy Roman Emperor, but the emergence of strong local dynasties in many Italian cities had stabilised things somewhat in the 1400s. By 1500, however, the stage was set for the peninsula to become a battlefield for European powers (especially France and Spain) to conduct their struggles, at an enormous cost to lives and resources.
This cost was intensified by new technology; it is poignant to read about contemporary campaigns (and even legislation in some Italian states) to limit the production and use of new varieties of firearms, and laments at their evil effects in warfare. The Spanish were noted for their reliance on firepower, and although it is possible to exaggerate the role of firearms in the subjugation of the indigenous peoples of Central and South America, some Italians – and others like the great French essayist Michel de Montaigne – were not backward in characterising the Spanish campaigns there as barbaric, precisely in their use of overwhelming firepower against underequipped opponents.


Against such a background, it is not surprising to learn that Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo were in demand for their services as military engineers no less than as artists. Both were involved in large-scale projects, and da Vinci famously left designs for assorted weaponry, including what is often described as a machine gun. It was certainly the case that artists were expected to have a good basic grasp of engineering, and that the boundaries between art, architecture and engineering were very fluid.


The stereotype of the “renaissance man” is accurate to the extent that the culture of the age characteristically did not favour specialisation, but the record of actual achievement is patchy. Some of da Vinci’s military designs were more or less feasible, others were not; the elegance and flair of his sketches should not mislead us into thinking that all these projects represented some visionary anticipation of modern machinery, and it is better to see them as brilliant thought experiments in solving engineering problems rather than exact designs.

****

All this underlines the immense power of the Renaissance myth: from the 16th century onwards, the image of the tormented multifaceted genius, soaring ahead of the conventions of the age, has left us with a rather lopsided view of figures such as da Vinci. Giorgio Vasari’s famous Lives of the Artists (which first appeared in 1550) helped to fix the image of the inspired creative spirit – and to create a story in which Italy (and especially Florence) is the epicentre of all that is noble and truly humane in the rebirth of civilisation after centuries of barbarity. It was Vasari’s narrative that was embraced so eagerly by 19th-century European cultural historians.

It continues to mould our understanding not only of the history of the period but our sense of what an artist and a genius really should be, and it would have been good to have in this book a slightly fuller account of how Vasari shaped the cultural “soft power” of the Italian Renaissance across the centuries – as described by Fletcher in an insightful final chapter. The Renaissance model of genius becomes a kind of witness to the sublime nature of Western civilisation as a whole; 16th-century Italy joins Periclean Athens or Marcus Aurelius’s Rome as a paradigm of timeless and universal human excellence.

The force of Fletcher’s narrative is not so much in offering a radical new evaluation of Italian Renaissance civilisation as in insisting that we see it as a cluster of cultural strategies and techniques within an exceptionally turbulent political milieu. This does not mean for a moment that we relegate da Vinci or Michelangelo to some dramatically inferior position, but it might prompt us to greater caution about the way in which the Renaissance myth has served a rather dubious geopolitical agenda.
Fletcher spells out at many points the role of Renaissance Italy in the great drama and tragedy of the age: the beginnings of the subjugation and enslavement of indigenous peoples on both sides of the Atlantic – through finance, seafaring expertise and, not least, by way of the legitimation given by the Papacy to various aspects of the colonial enterprise. As her final paragraph puts it, we need to be aware of where the great works of the period come from, and how their initial reception was “curated” by figures like Vasari.

Recognising artistic excellence is not an excuse for failing to see the political and economic factors that make it practically possible – and this is bound to be shot through with a degree of moral shadow, where those factors include slavery and exploitation. A great achievement is not necessarily a timeless ideal; we can admire and even be astonished by the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel without using it or its designer as a universal measure of human creativity.

If we demythologise the Renaissance a little, we may learn to do more justice to what preceded it. Professor Fletcher has a brief discussion of scientific advances in the mid 16th century, especially in anatomy, navigational skills and botany – the latter two spurred on by the fresh stimulus of colonial travel and discovery. But the fact that this treatment is relatively brief and relates to a period rather later than the “high Renaissance” should give us pause if we are inclined to think of this as an epoch of spectacular scientific progress.

Many scholars have pointed out that the 15th and early 16th centuries are a rather stagnant period in many areas of natural science compared with some parts of the Middle Ages, when astronomy, mechanics and logic made substantial advances. The great 16th-century exception, Copernicus’s treatise of 1543 on the circulation of planets around the sun, was not a dramatic and total rejection of earlier astronomical method based on new scientific evidence, but a refinement designed to clear up the mathematics of charting the heavenly bodies. It was received with interest and some enthusiasm at the time, but was clearly not seen as a radical departure from the principles of Aristotle. Only with slightly later figures like Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) and Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) did actual observation of the heavens play a decisive part in the argument.

The uncomfortable truth is that the age of the Renaissance contributed very little to innovation in science. This was largely because the revival of classical learning and languages concentrated attention on what was called humanitas – literary and rhetorical accomplishment (hence our designation of some academic subjects as “humanities”) – rather than on empirical observation or technical skill in logic and mathematics.

Later medieval philosophy had become achingly technical, and the recovery of classical literature offered a welcome relief. The writings of the medievals were mocked for their stylistic awfulness; and the exhilaration and enthusiasm for the Platonic tradition that arose in the later 15th century was, as much as anything, an enthusiasm for a philosophy that more obviously promised moral and spiritual insight, rather than the virtuoso analysis of concepts. So might a 20th-century student have felt on reading Jean-Paul Sartre after an unbroken diet of logical positivism in undergraduate philosophy.

****

For good and ill, the Renaissance as an intellectual phenomenon was not a revolt in the name of “reason” or “liberty” or any such Enlightenment motive. It was an excited recovery of the ideals of formal elegance and proportion in writing and building. It was also the flowering of a sort of New Age fascination with ancient and hidden wisdom. The great strength of Professor Fletcher’s book is that it helps us keep the Renaissance in proportion, rather than seeing it as either the decisive foundation for Western modernity (it was in many ways backward-looking, its energy linked to models of revival and recovery rather than advance), or a melodrama of Olympian geniuses and (literally) Machiavellian villains.

To learn that Lucrezia Borgia owned a mozzarella factory is somehow a useful corrective to the melodrama; to know that some of da Vinci’s supposed inventions were Heath Robinson fantasies balances the myth of universal genius.

Reading this engaging book helps us to appreciate the undoubted exuberance of the period without signing up to a distinctly shopworn narrative of some triumphant awakening from dogmatic slumbers, destined to change the face of global humanity – whether global humanity liked it or not. 
The Beauty and the Terror: An Alternative History of the Italian Renaissance

Rowan Williams is an Anglican prelate, theologian and poet, who was Archbishop of Canterbury from 2002 to 2012. He writes on books for the New Statesman
"These, and many other matters which might be noticed, add a volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic utterances that this is a Christian nation" - Justice David Brewer, Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States, 1892
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#2
Sorry, my computer isn't displaying the information to post a link.

Google:

"The Mediaverse : Tim's Realistic 'medieval' FANTASY Blog"


"The 'real' Second Renaissance: Revival, Progress and Cooperative Nationalism"

by Timothy R.J. Eveland
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#3
It is very likely that the Neo-Missionaries go against Millennial gaudiness and rediscover Renaissance-style elegant aesthetics.
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#4
The second Renaissance already started, and it is found in the new age and counter-culture.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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#5
(03-14-2021, 12:52 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: The second Renaissance already started, and it is found in the new age and counter-culture.

You're right - sort of: Just as the likes of John Wycliffe and Jan Hus (and Johannes Guttenberg and his Bible) foreshadowed the Reformation, so will the New Age foreshadow the next "Reformation," in that the new Awakening will arise from an attempt to emerge from the staleness of the New Renaissance, which will seem "stale" beyond belief since it will fall within the first of the two 1Ts of a new warrior age.
"These, and many other matters which might be noticed, add a volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic utterances that this is a Christian nation" - Justice David Brewer, Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States, 1892
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#6
There was no break from the Renaissance into later times. The Enlightenment is more of the same, and mostly we are here.

The standards of artistic excellence have remained continually high, so there has been no break into amateurish achievement. Even those who try "primitive" art are more sophisticated than one might expect from the simplicity of the message.

Standards remain at a level in which, as Malcolm Gladwell put it, the really-good stuff requires about 10,000 hours of dedicated refinement of art or performance. Rather few get the opportunity to dedicate themselves to such; maybe they would rather enjoy a normal life, which might be far easier for a semi-skilled laborer. After 10,000 hours (anything more is an expression of futility) the achievements of a writer, composer, or artist become deceptively easy for the creator. Appreciably less compromises one. Sure, there are one-hit wonders, but when one looks at the performers one recognizes why one hit is all that one gets.

Gladwell tells us that in no field is there such a thing as a 'natural", someone of such extreme talent that one needs little to no preparation or refinement, at least at contemporary standards of excellence.

OK, how does it go for musical performance? The Berlin Conservatory is one of the largest schools for musical performers. Gladwell relates that those who have about 2000 hours of playing time as violinists (roughly the minimum for matriculation) typically graduate to the German equivalent of American K-12 learning. They teach elementary-level music to teenagers and younger. Consider this: if one had extreme refinement as a violinist one might have great difficulty listening to kids playing notes out of tune if not wrong altogether. At 8000 hours one largely gets those violinists who play in community orchestras and somewhat-seedy pit orchestras or perhaps teach violin in the Conservatory. At 10K one has the relatively few who make the renowned orchestras such as the Philharmonic orchestras of Berlin, Vienna, Munich, Hamburg, Cologne, the Stattskapelle Dresden, and the Leipzig Gewandhaus and some well-regarded radio orchestras.
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist  but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.


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#7
(12-16-2021, 07:34 PM)pbrower2a Wrote: There was no break from the Renaissance into later times. The Enlightenment is more of the same, and mostly we are here.

Certainly, most historians agree that with modernism, beginning in circa 1892 (1885-1898) with Post-Impressionist painting, followed by symbolism, fauvism, expressionism and cubism and in modernist music, all dating from the turn of the 20th century, we have entered a new era that ended the Renaissance. This was also seen in our becoming a global society after European imperialism rapidly climaxed and then met its end, and its world dominance since the Renaissance was unravelled by nationalism resulting in a "civil war" (world war 1, The Great War). The remaining aristocratic empires met their demise, and after the two world wars, Europe lost its colonies too and democracy cemented itself in central Europe. Japan and China became world powers from the 1890s onward, and today our world is multi-centered and almost borderless at-least economically. Technology changed our lives and our landscape, from the automobile to the airplane and electrification, mass media, the skyscraper, mass production, etc. Workers gained greater power for a while. Our view of ourselves and the universe was totally transformed by the new physics, astronomy, psychology and philosophy. Enlightenment worldviews are now outdated in many respects; although perhaps not entirely in the area of human rights, despite the challenges from demagogues and totalitarian tyrants. Cross-cultural world influence is rampant and stimulating. We have discovered much more about cultures of the past and in many lands than was ever known. What is also completely different from the Renaissance/Enlightenment era and any previous era is how we have discovered in our post-1890s world that human civilization could be mortal. This is pictured in the famous scream painting of 1893 by Edvard Munch, and heard in Tchiakovsky's Pathetique Symphony from the same year.

While orchestral performance standards may still be high, inspiring compositions mostly disappeared from the academic and classical world, and that's what counts. What was composed was in new styles, more dissonant and more brash. Pop culture became king in music, in the forms of jazz, rock'n'roll, pop, musicals, folk, electronic and ambient, and the later loud and screechy genres. Modern arts are more imaginative and reflect new vitality, being freed from representation of outward reality and expressing inner reality instead, but sometimes they lack real artistry. Multi-media arts can be quite elaborate, but their mastery is not of the same kind as in previous arts.

The second renaissance emerges from this new world society, and mostly it consists of a few bright spots and is expressed among subcultures, mostly young. The hippie counter-culture brought forth an amazing underground of psychedelic garage bands, a more prolific creativity among young people in the mid to late sixties than one can even imagine, and was scarcely even visible in its own time. Poster art was also amazing, and world influences have been important. Later in the early 90s, the rave and cyber culture emerged in a second summer of love almost equally prolific and amazing, and in such genres as ambient and new age music there is a similar proliferation mostly hidden from most people, but occasionally truly mystical and inspiring. I mentioned multi-media arts, and in general the internet and electronic computers available to all has opened artistic expression to more people by far than ever before. Unfortunately in popular music the quality seen in some genres from the 1920s to the 40s and from the 1960s up into the early 1980s has mostly disappeared, and partly this is due to concentration of the media, and partly to the general cynicism of the times, but at least the internet and the web has opened the way for a few good musicians to come forward and find an audience. Jazz has been a repository of innovation and inspiration since its start at the turn of the 20th century, although its appeal is sometimes limited.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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