The Family in Renaissance Florence: Book Three by Leon Battista Alberti (translated by Renée Neu Watkins)
118 pages, $19.95 list
0-88133-821-4
978-0-88133-821-8
eBook availability
The Family in Renaissance Florence
Book Three
A classic of Italian literature! The chief merit of this work lies in its scope: it directly assays the personal value system of the Florentine bourgeois class, which did so much to foster the development of art, literature, and science. It displays a variety of high styles—high rhetoric, systematic moral exposition, novelistic portrayal of character—in the typical Renaissance framework of the dialogue. The treatise, in its entirety, shows a Florentine paterfamilias and two uncles instructing some submissive nephews in the ethics of private life. Money and reputation are its primary themes. Book III, the most dramatic, far-ranging, and down-to-earth of the four books, does not present a single bourgeois outlook but, as a dialogue, expresses conflicting points of view, enabling students to relive social and moral conflicts that troubled early capitalist society.
Table of Contents
“This is a wonderful primary source, very accessible and germane for students today.” — Eric Dursteler, Brigham Young University

“A very useful and concise introduction to some of the social attitudes of Renaissance." — Christine Kooi, Louisiana State University

“Students particularly enjoyed the General Prologue and became involved in classroom debates about the image of women presented in the book.” — Joseph F. Patrouch, Florida International University

“This is an excellent translation of an original source, with an introduction by one of the leading scholars working on the Renaissance family.” — Larissa Taylor, Colby College