The Christianopolis (1619) of Johann Valentin Andreae describes in great detail a utopian community of scholar-craftsmen, as seen through the eyes of a naive young traveller. It is a multi-level text, carefully constructed to provide both entertainment and a critique of contemporary society and religion, which could also be read as the prospectus for the establishment of a new community. This new translation aims to clarify Andreae's elliptical Latin for the first time by identifying parallel passages, allusions and sources for his ideas, and by linking Christianopolis with Andreae's other work as satirist, dramatist, poet and mathematician. A new model of his revision of ideas drawn from Campanella is put forward, and the politico-economic principles embodied in the text are explored. The translation should be of interest to students of the history of utopian ideas, and the history of economic thought.
| Limba | Engleza |
| Cuprins | Acknowledgements. Preface. Abbreviations. 1. Biographical Introduction. 2. The Sources of Christianopolis. 3. The Nature of the Christianopolis Project. 4. Socio-Economic Analysis of Christianopolis. 5. The Text of Christianopolis. 6. Postscript. 7. Bibliography. Index. Figures: 1. Andreae's Plan for an Ideal House. 2. Andreae's Design for Modest Domestic Housing. 3. Plan of Christianopolis, after Andreae (1619). 4. Daniel Speckle's 'Perfect' Fortification. 5. Ideal Human Proportions: Andreae's Vitruvian Man. 6. The Labyrinth of Error. 7. Christianopolis (1619). |
| Data Publicarii | 1 May 99 |
| Format | Hardback |
| Paginare | 352 |
In cazul unei comenzi va vom comunica telefonic in maxim 48 de ore termenul exact de livrare. Daca termenul comunicat nu este convenabil, puteti anula comanda.