Product Description
Thomas More's 'Utopia' in early modern Europe provides the first complete account of all the editions of Utopia, whether vernacular or Latin, printed before 1650, together with a transcription of all the prefatory materials they contain. The reception of the idea of Utopia in early modern Europe has been studied extensively before: what has been lacking is a composite picture of how Utopia moved by means of translation from culture to culture and of the ways in which particular versions offered themselves to their readers. Part I consists of a series of chapters which provide a contextual and interpretative framework for each national group of translations; in Part II, the substantive paratexts of all the extant translations of Utopia printed between 1524 and 1643 are reproduced both in the original language and in English translation. The book also contains a chapter sketching the fortunes of the Latin paratexts and editions up to 1650, and a transcription of a single Latin paratext which has never, to our knowledge, been printed in modern times. The aim of the volume is to provide a comprehensive map of the transfer of Utopia across the vernaculars in early modern Europe, with enough contextual and interpretative analysis to allow its plural trajectories to be grasped as a single complex phenomenon. Some of the pathways that More's work follows are highly individual, taking advantage of particular cultural or political conjunctions; others prove to be connected, sometimes obscurely or surprisingly. No study has yet attempted to trace out these various transformations and intersections in their concrete manifestation as moments in the history of a book. This book will be of interest to specialists in early modern cultural history and history of the book, to graduate students working in these fields, and to anyone for whom the extraordinary success of More's Utopia as a book published on the European market remains a perennial fascination.
About the Author
Terence Cave is Emeritus Professor of French, University of Oxford, and Emeritus Research Fellow, St John's College, Oxford.