Hunting the Falcon
Autor John Guy, Julia Foxen Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 iun 2024
Considerăm că Hunting the Falcon reprezintă o schimbare de paradigmă în istoriografia dinastiei Tudor, fiind o ediție ce capitalizează pe cele mai recente descoperiri de arhivă pentru a oferi o perspectivă factuală, dincolo de speculațiile narative. Ne-a atras atenția modul în care John Guy și Julia Fox reușesc să curețe straturile de mitologie istorică, transformând o poveste de dragoste arhi-cunoscută într-o analiză politică riguroasă. Merită menționat că autorii acordă o atenție deosebită celor șapte ani petrecuți de Anne în Franța, perioadă adesea ignorată, demonstrând cum influențele europene i-au modelat strategiile politice ulterioare. Lucrarea extinde cadrul propus de Anne Boleyn de G. W. Bernard prin utilizarea unor surse noi care atestă cât de aproape a fost Anne de a deveni suveran comun alături de Henry. Dacă în lucrările sale anterioare, precum Elizabeth sau Mary Queen of Scots, John Guy explora luptele pentru putere ale suveranelor consacrate, aici el analizează ascensiunea și prăbușirea unei femei care a navigat într-o societate patriarhală prin inteligență politică pură. Spre deosebire de Anne Boleyn: 500 Years of Lies de Hayley Nolan, care mizează pe o abordare de tip expozeu, Hunting the Falcon păstrează un ton academic echilibrat, oferind cea mai coerentă narațiune a dovezilor disponibile până în prezent. Structura este densă, dar ritmul este susținut de detaliile inedite despre intrigile de la curte și mecanismele diplomației internaționale din secolul al XVI-lea.
Preț: 71.10 lei
Preț vechi: 94.82 lei
-25%
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 16-30 iunie
Livrare express 30 mai-05 iunie pentru 55.74 lei
Specificații
ISBN-10: 1526631539
Pagini: 624
Dimensiuni: 128 x 196 x 42 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
De ce să citești această carte
Această carte se adresează pasionaților de istorie care caută rigoare academică în detrimentul senzaționalismului. Cititorul câștigă o înțelegere profundă a modului în care un mariaj regal a reconfigurat harta politică a Europei. Este o recomandare esențială pentru cei care vor să descopere o Anne Boleyn care nu a fost doar o victimă sau o seducătoare, ci un strateg politic de temut, într-o ediție bogată în date noi.
Despre autor
John Guy (n. 1949) este un reputat istoric britanic, specialist în perioada Tudor și membru al Universității Cambridge. Cu o carieră ce include 16 volume de referință, Guy este recunoscut pentru capacitatea de a reinterpreta figuri istorice majore, precum Thomas More sau Maria Stuart, prin prisma documentelor de epocă. Julia Fox este istoric și autoare, cunoscută pentru biografiile sale dedicate femeilor influente din perioada Tudor, precum Jane Boleyn. Colaborarea lor pentru Hunting the Falcon îmbină expertiza academică a lui Guy cu talentul narativ al lui Fox, oferind o perspectivă duală asupra puterii în Anglia secolului XVI.
Descriere
A groundbreaking examination of how the marriage of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn sent shockwaves across a continent and changed England forever.
'In many places, where once we had speculation, we now have certainty. This book is at once an education and a joy to read' LITERARY REVIEW
'Combines meticulously researched history and contemporary voices with narrative flair' SUNDAY TIMES
'Anne Boleyn comes alive in this impressive study . . . Moves and informs' THE TIMES
'The most cogent narrative reading of the evidence to date' SPECTATOR
The story of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn is one of the most remarkable in history: a long courtship followed by a shotgun wedding and then a coronation, ending just short of three years later when a husband's passion turned to such hatred that he simply wanted his wife gone. In Hunting the Falcon, John Guy and Julia Fox examine the most recent archival discoveries and peel back layers of historical myth to present Anne and Henry in startlingly new ways. They show how Anne and Henry's relationship was tied almost completely to the major events of international politics at one of the great turning points of European history, and dispel any assumptions that a sixteenth-century woman, even a queen, could exert little influence on the politics and beliefs of a patriarchal society. Anne was in fact a shrewd and ruthless politician in her own right, a woman who steered Henry and his policies - and whom Henry seriously contemplated making joint sovereign.
Hunting the Falcon sets the facts and some completely new finds into a wide frame, unearthing the truth about these two extraordinary lives and their tumultuous times. It pays particular attention to the seven 'missing' years that Anne spent in France, and explores how she organised her side of the royal court in novel ways that ultimately sowed the seeds of her own downfall. In this feat of historical research and analysis, Guy and Fox offer a sumptuous retelling of one of the most consequential marriages in history and an exhilarating portrait of love, lust, politics and power.
'Better than Wolf Hall because it's all true' ANDREW ROBERTS
'A sumptuous drama of lust, intrigue and betrayal, underpinned by the harsh reality of politics' AMANDA FOREMAN
Recenzii
The vivacious Anne Boleyn comes alive in this impressive study . In Hunting the Falcon, the husband-and-wife team John Guy and Julia Fox have returned to the contemporary sources to place the marriage in its European context. Guy, a Cambridge historian, is one of only a handful of scholars capable of deciphering some of these manuscripts, while Fox has written a groundbreaking book on Boleyn's sister-in-law, Jane Parker. The result of their efforts moves and informs, improving our understanding of "the marriage that convulsed a continent" and revitalising the biography of Anne . In Hunting the Falcon we see [Anne] quick, bright in flight, her eyes still keen and her talons sharp
Traces the diplomatic threads of the story with skill . . . Guy and Fox do Anne the courtesy of taking her seriously as a political agent - even if a disastrously unsuccessful one . . . A serious and compelling study
[Hunting the Falcon] is not another unavailing attempt to unravel Anne's psyche or the secret of her appeal to Henry . It is an attempt, and a successful one, to reintroduce her as a player on the European political stage . Guy and Fox's research has also produced significant new evidence on the complex web of European negotiations surrounding Henry's efforts to shake off one wife and marry another. The diplomatic world springs vividly to life here . Anne's role on this European stage has long been almost ignored . But Guy and Fox foreground her placement here and both the advantages and perils that it brought . In many places, where once we had speculation, we now have certainty. This book is at once an education and a joy to read
Provides the most cogent narrative reading of the evidence to date. It leaves us in no doubt of the momentous consequences of Henry's pursuit of Anne Boleyn . . . Fox and Guy achieve this by emphasising the influence of France on the formation of Anne's personality, her ideas and even on the circumstances of her fall. This they set against the backdrop of international alliances
A necessary corrective to the old, broad-strokes story that paints Henry as a fickle child and Anne as the essential Boleyn-dynasty machiavel
There has been nothing like it since Eric Ives' magisterial Anne Boleyn . . . New interpretations of some known sources and insights gained from recent archival research clarify significant points in Anne's story, many of them too often mangled or distorted
Better than Wolf Hall because it's all true. The authors' extraordinary scholarship in every possible historical source, as well as the vibrancy of their writing, delivers the seemingly impossible: a genuinely fresh interpretation of the marriage that produced Protestant England and the greatest of all the British monarchs, Elizabeth I. With a paranoiac court where mild flirtation could lead to torture and disembowelment, the story still has the power to shock: Henry Tudor meets Joseph Stalin. Anne Boleyn was a strong independent woman, and paid an horrific price for it
John Guy and Julia Fox have turned Henry VIII's second marriage into a sumptuous drama of lust, intrigue and betrayal, underpinned by the harsh reality of politics. Enriched by a trove of fresh material, Hunting the Falcon offers a new and richer interpretation of one of the most turbulent periods in British history