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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Erica BennerPublisher: WW Norton & Co Imprint: WW Norton & Co Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 21.10cm Weight: 0.302kg ISBN: 9780393355819ISBN 10: 0393355810 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 24 July 2018 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsLively, compulsively readable, unshowily erudite.--Terry Eagleton A ripping read.... fascinating, charming, enjoyably unorthodox. Erica Benner convincingly argues [that] there was a great deal more to Machiavelli.... She interweaves his own words with those of his contemporaries, as well as setting him in the context of his world. The result is a rich, vivid, and endlessly surprising portrayal of the man and his times. Benner's eminently readable book serves as an introduction to Machiavelli and offers plenty of fresh insight even for those sure they know him and his work. Like Machiavelli's own writings, Benner's is a meditation on the virtues and flaws of various forms of government and ambitious men who will rule at will unless checked by institutions. Excellent.... [Benner is] a fantastic reader of Machiavelli's very varied literary output. She's as well-versed in this author's writing style and writing mind as readers could ask of any biographer. Fascinating, remarkable.... Erica Benner illuminates not only the life of Machiavelli but the complex and cruel political world in which he operated.--Avi Shlaim Erica Benner's enthralling and moving evocation of Machiavelli's turbulent career reveals how much he is our contemporary.--Rosamund Bartlett, author of Tolstoy: A Russian Life Is there anything more to say about Machiavelli's Prince after more than five hundred years? Well, yes. Erica Benner beautifully embeds Machiavelli's most famous book within the Florentine politics of his time. More than any other book known to me, this one genuinely illuminates the humanity of Machiavelli. -- Steven B. Smith, Alfred Cowles Professor of Political Science, Yale University In Erica Benner's Be Like the Fox, Machiavelli-in his own words the `historian, the comic writer, the tragic author'-comes alive as the master of irony deployed in the service of justice, civic morality and the rule of law. This delightful and convincing account should be the final nail in the coffin of the derogatory term `Machiavellian.' -- Samuel Bowles, author of The Moral Economy: Why Good Incentives Are No Substitute for Good Citizens No other writer about Machiavelli approaches the liveliness of Erica Benner. In Be Like the Fox she boldly confronts the most daunting obstacle to interpreting him: that being himself so foxy he rarely means quite what he writes. Drawing on his life and all his varied writings and inter-weaving these with the turbulent life of Florence in his day, she retrieves a Machiavelli who is not the promoter of crookedness but its critic, a friend of democracy and honest government whose heart is with the underdog. -- Clifford Orwin, professor of political science, classics, and Jewish studies, Toronto University Erica Benner's compelling book testifies to the eternal return of Machiavelli's puzzle: whether he was the voice of Satan, or the author who wanted to put morality on firmer human foundations by unveiling the empty moral platitudes that politicians used to shroud their foxy and ruthless behavior. Like a riveting novel, Benner's book guides us through Machiavelli's times and shows the variety of masks he put on, suggesting that the man behind them was less likely to compromise than his words might lead us to believe. -- Nadia Urbinati, author of Democracy Disfigured and professor of political science, Columbia University Erica Benner succeeds brilliantly in overturning centuries-old received views of a seminal but misunderstood writer and thinker. Her enthralling and moving evocation of Machiavelli's turbulent career, set in the milieu in which he lived, also reveals how much he is our contemporary. -- Rosamund Bartlett, author of Tolstoy: A Russian Life A ripping read. . . . fascinating, charming, enjoyably unorthodox. -- Tim Smith-Laing - The Telegraph (UK) Engaging, entertaining, splendidly colourful. . . . Brings to life a Machiavelli who's a man of considerable political principle. Benner does a wonderful job of bringing to life Florentine society - the world of the piazzas, the courts, the battlefields. . . . A creative, very readable book with more than a little contemporary resonance. -- Catherine Fletcher - Literary Review (UK) In this tightly composed narrative of Machiavelli's life and works, Benner argues that `The Prince' is a work of secret subversion, using irony and beguilement to advance a staunchly republican message. . . . [A] gripping portrait of a brilliant political thinker, who understood the dangers of authoritarianism and looked for ways to curb them even though independent speech had become impossible. -- The New Yorker Lively, unshowily erudite, compulsively readable. -- Terry Eagleton - The Guardian Erudite and engaging. . . . Be Like the Fox is not detached, archival history but a remarkable work of imaginative engagement backed by scholarly learning. Benner brings Machiavelli alive by weaving his words and those of his contemporaries into the narrative as a playwright might. . . . Be Like the Fox can be read with pleasure by anyone interested in the craft of politics and the life of ideas -- Edmund Fawcett - New York Times Book Review Unconventional. . . Benner argues that in [his] turbulent, violent world, Machiavelli's most consistent advice favoured principle, restraint and respect for the rule of law, even in The Prince. . . . Compelling. -- Julian Baggini - Financial Times Is there anything more to say about Machiavelli's Prince after more than five hundred years? Well, yes. Erica Benner beautifully embeds Machiavelli's most famous book within the Florentine politics of his time. More than any other book known to me, this one genuinely illuminates the humanity of Machiavelli. -- Steven B. Smith, Alfred Cowles Professor of Political Science, Yale University In Erica Benner's Be Like the Fox, Machiavelli-in his own words the `historian, the comic writer, the tragic author'-comes alive as the master of irony deployed in the service of justice, civic morality and the rule of law. This delightful and convincing account should be the final nail in the coffin of the derogatory term `Machiavellian.' -- Samuel Bowles, author of The Moral Economy: Why Good Incentives Are No Substitute for Good Citizens No other writer about Machiavelli approaches the liveliness of Erica Benner. In Be Like the Fox she boldly confronts the most daunting obstacle to interpreting him: that being himself so foxy he rarely means quite what he writes. Drawing on his life and all his varied writings and inter-weaving these with the turbulent life of Florence in his day, she retrieves a Machiavelli who is not the promoter of crookedness but its critic, a friend of democracy and honest government whose heart is with the underdog. -- Clifford Orwin, professor of political science, classics, and Jewish studies, Toronto University Erica Benner's compelling book testifies to the eternal return of Machiavelli's puzzle: whether he was the voice of Satan, or the author who wanted to put morality on firmer human foundations by unveiling the empty moral platitudes that politicians used to shroud their foxy and ruthless behavior. Like a riveting novel, Benner's book guides us through Machiavelli's times and shows the variety of masks he put on, suggesting that the man behind them was less likely to compromise than his words might lead us to believe. -- Nadia Urbinati, author of Democracy Disfigured and professor of political science, Columbia University Erica Benner succeeds brilliantly in overturning centuries-old received views of a seminal but misunderstood writer and thinker. Her enthralling and moving evocation of Machiavelli's turbulent career, set in the milieu in which he lived, also reveals how much he is our contemporary. -- Rosamund Bartlett, author of Tolstoy: A Russian Life A ripping read. . . . fascinating, charming, enjoyably unorthodox. -- Tim Smith-Laing - The Telegraph (UK) Engaging, entertaining, splendidly colourful. . . . Brings to life a Machiavelli who's a man of considerable political principle. Benner does a wonderful job of bringing to life Florentine society - the world of the piazzas, the courts, the battlefields. . . . A creative, very readable book with more than a little contemporary resonance. -- Catherine Fletcher - Literary Review (UK) In this tightly composed narrative of Machiavelli's life and works, Benner argues that `The Prince' is a work of secret subversion, using irony and beguilement to advance a staunchly republican message. . . . [A] gripping portrait of a brilliant political thinker, who understood the dangers of authoritarianism and looked for ways to curb them even though independent speech had become impossible. -- The New Yorker Lively, unshowily erudite, compulsively readable. -- Terry Eagleton - The Guardian Erudite and engaging. . . . Be Like the Fox is not detached, archival history but a remarkable work of imaginative engagement backed by scholarly learning. Benner brings Machiavelli alive by weaving his words and those of his contemporaries into the narrative as a playwright might. . . . Be Like the Fox can be read with pleasure by anyone interested in the craft of politics and the life of ideas -- Edmund Fawcett - New York Times Book Review Unconventional. . . Benner argues that in [his] turbulent, violent world, Machiavelli's most consistent advice favoured principle, restraint and respect for the rule of law, even in The Prince. . . . Compelling. -- Julian Baggini - Financial Times In our world of new princes and divided societies, with confrontations in constant danger of escalating to conflict, Be Like the Fox reads like a cautionary call from the past. Anyone seeking to understand power, force, and government today would do well to read this book. -- General Sir Rupert Smith, author of The Utility of Force: The Art of War in the Modern World Erica Benner's enthralling and moving evocation of Machiavelli's turbulent career reveals how much he is our contemporary. -- Rosamund Bartlett, author of Tolstoy: A Russian Life Fascinating, remarkable.... Erica Benner illuminates not only the life of Machiavelli but the complex and cruel political world in which he operated. -- Avi Shlaim Excellent.... [Benner is] a fantastic reader of Machiavelli's very varied literary output. She's as well-versed in this author's writing style and writing mind as readers could ask of any biographer. -- Open Letters Monthly Benner's eminently readable book serves as an introduction to Machiavelli and offers plenty of fresh insight even for those sure they know him and his work. Like Machiavelli's own writings, Benner's is a meditation on the virtues and flaws of various forms of government and ambitious men who will rule at will unless checked by institutions. -- Foreign Policy Erica Benner convincingly argues [that] there was a great deal more to Machiavelli.... She interweaves his own words with those of his contemporaries, as well as setting him in the context of his world. The result is a rich, vivid, and endlessly surprising portrayal of the man and his times. -- BBC Book Review Unconventional.... Benner argues that in [his] turbulent, violent world, Machiavelli's most consistent advice favoured principle, restraint and respect for the rule of law, even in The Prince.... Compelling. -- Julian Baggini - Financial Times In this tightly composed narrative of Machiavelli's life and works, Benner argues that The Prince is a work of secret subversion, using irony and beguilement to advance a staunchly republican message.... A gripping portrait of a brilliant political thinker, who understood the dangers of authoritarianism and looked for ways to curb them even though independent speech had become impossible. -- The New Yorker A ripping read.... fascinating, charming, enjoyably unorthodox. -- Telegraph Lively, compulsively readable, unshowily erudite. -- Terry Eagleton - Guardian Author InformationErica Benner lives in Berlin. She is the author of several books, including Machiavelli’s Ethics and Machiavelli’s Prince: A New Reading. Formerly a Fellow at Yale University, Benner taught for many years at Oxford University and the London School of Economics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |