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Swerve: How the World Became Modern

0.0
Pages
356
Language
EN
ISBN
9780393343403
Reading Time
~6h 14min

Swerve: How the World Became Modern is a book by Stephen Greenblatt. It has 356 pages.

About this book

Stephen Greenblatt’s Swerve traces a pivotal moment in intellectual history: the 1417 discovery of an ancient Roman manuscript that would quietly reshape Western thought. Focusing on the lost epic poem De rerum natura by Lucretius, Greenblatt follows the path of its recovery by the humanist scholar Poggio Bracciolini and examines how this rediscovered text introduced a materialist, atomistic worldview into medieval Europe. The narrative moves between monastic archives, Renaissance courts, and early modern laboratories to show how Lucretius’s ideas about nature, human desire, and the absence of divine intervention gradually seeped into philosophy, science, and literature. Rather than presenting history as a steady march of progress, the book illustrates how forgotten works can resurface to alter cultural trajectories. Greenblatt’s approach weaves close reading of classical poetry with careful archival research, demonstrating how the physical survival of a single manuscript can catalyze centuries of intellectual change. The work remains a study in the unpredictable circulation of ideas and the enduring power of ancient texts to inform modern secular thought.

About the Author

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many pages is Swerve: How the World Became Modern?+

Swerve: How the World Became Modern has 356 pages.

What is Swerve: How the World Became Modern about?+

Stephen Greenblatt’s Swerve traces a pivotal moment in intellectual history: the 1417 discovery of an ancient Roman manuscript that would quietly reshape Western thought. Focusing on the lost epic poem De rerum natura by Lucretius, Greenblatt follows the path of its recovery by the humanist scholar ...

Who wrote Swerve: How the World Became Modern?+

Swerve: How the World Became Modern was written by Stephen Greenblatt.