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In Praise of Folly by Desiderius Erasmus
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The Praise of Folly

by Desiderius Erasmus

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1,229142,670 (3.8)11
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Barnes & Noble Publishing Inc. (2004), Paperback

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Tags:nonfiction, philosophy
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English (9)  Dutch (4)  Spanish (1)  All languages (14)
Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
One of the high points of Renaissance literature and fuel for the coming Protestant Reformation, Erasmus' 'In Praise of Folly' is pretty thick going these days. It's a satirical take-down of human nature. Folly is praised as a god, along with its followers: self-love, oblivion, flattery, etc. The prose is exceedingly verbose, which has the virtue of providing a dense sort of lyricism to the screed but can make it a struggle to keep up with the overbearing number of allusions and double-to-triple meanings woven into the text. While the book (essay, really, since it tops at about 80 pages) has been described as a comedic classic, the humor is highly cerebral and works the better you understand the history from which it sprung. Regardless of the troubles modern readers uneducated in the humanities (such as myself) might have with a work it is a valuable text for understanding the history of humanism and Reformation politics. It's also a classic guideline for the construction of effective social commentary.

(This review originally appeared on zombieunderground.net) ( )
coffeezombie | Jun 8, 2009 | 2 vote
Erasmus was one of the great minds of the early Renaissance, a good friend of the lawyer/philosopher Thomas More and the theologian John Colet.
thejazzmonger | Sep 20, 2008 |  
Dutch
Budz888 | May 31, 2008 | 1 vote |
I tried. This is John Wilson's 1668 translation and I had trouble getting used to reading the useage. It's beautiful language but I still couldn't get going. As we change societally, we change our language. I got the gist of this book and I really like the concept but I am going to look for a modern translation. ( )
gmillar | Nov 2, 2007 |  
This is difficult to read because of the satire and the fact the Erasmus wrote a lot between the lines. It is a good read if you can get through it and a must-read for anyone who is an early modern historian or buff. ( )
Angelic55blonde | Jun 30, 2007 |  
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A szerző kiváló XVI. századi humanista volt, valójában magának a humanizmusnak megteremtője. Szemkápráztató görbetükröt tart emberi gyarlóságokban elmarsztalt kortásai elé, hogy pirulva kivehessék önnön szatíra nagyította alakjukat: így járnak a megvásárolható papok, a buja házasságtörők, a széltoló filozófusok, a pöffeszkedő nagyurak, a potyalesők, a kocsmatöltelékek, a vizet prédikáló-bort vedelő aszkéták, a bölcsességet aprópénzre váltó tudósok. Bepillantván Erasmus világtükrébe, bizony mi magunk, egy másik kor más körülményei között élő emberei is ráismerhetünk nem egy hibánkra, és megszívlelhetjük tanítását.

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0140446087, Paperback)

A satire on the pretensions of Erasmus's contemporaries in the Church and philosophy

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)

(see all 4 descriptions)

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