Introduction: The Rope and the Chains
Chapter 1: Before Virtù
Chapter 2: The Road to Vivere Libero
Chapter 3: Say Your Prayers
Chapter 4: The Medicine Man
Chapter 5: Facing the “Twin Furies”
Conclusion: Bruised But Not Broken
Carl J. Nederman is professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University.
“Cary Nederman's book on the early Machiavelli is a long overdue
and masterfully executed study of the Florentine's writings
composed before he penned The Prince and his other illustrious
works. Nederman examines the young Machiavelli's literary and prose
writings to explore the role of, among other concepts, virtue,
liberty, and religion in the Florentine's intellectual development.
The Rope and the Chains: Machiavelli’s Early Thought and Its
Transformations is a major contribution to Machiavelli studies and
to scholarship on early modern intellectual history.”
*John Mccormick, University of Chicago*
"Few scholars possess the intellectual firepower to engage the
varied perspectives of historians, philosophers, and social
scientists on Machiavelli’s political thought. Cary Nederman’s
latest book leaves no doubt that he is in that select group. His
expertise in ancient and medieval European ideas yields cogent and
insightful analyses of Machiavelli’s early writings, revealing a
pattern of both continuities and disjunctures with his later, more
celebrated works which are indispensable for a well-rounded
understanding of his political thought as a whole. Rather than
producing another intellectual biography, Nederman has judiciously
employed linguistic and conceptual analysis to trace an impressive
range of themes in these neglected early writings. Political
theorists will be gripped, in particular, by Nederman’s analysis of
how the concept of virtue came to be problematized in relation to
fortune, as well as of the “staggering” change that occurred in how
Machiavelli understood the relation between liberty and security by
the time he wrote The Prince. Readers will also appreciate
Nederman’s careful examination of Machiavelli’s early commentaries
on leaders and institutions in not only Italian but also French and
German politics in the first decade of the sixteenth century."
*Jason Maloy, University of Louisiana, Lafayette*
"This is the best study currently available on Machiavelli, one
which investigates the vexed question of the relationship between
Machiavelli the political actor as Secretary of the Florentine
republic and Machiavelli the political thinker after the republic’s
fall. An audacious and novel reconstruction of Machiavelli’s
political thought, it is at once a close textual analysis of
Machiavelli’s language, and a deft and brilliant exploration of the
genealogy of his central political ideas. It is undeniably an
indispensable addition to Machiavelli scholarship.”
*Benedetto Fontana, Baruch College/CUNY*
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