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The Study
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The Study

Andrew Hui on Renaissance Libraries, Solitude, and the Power of Reading

Originally published on December 9, 2024 at 11:31 AM (Episode 387)

Introduction

In the sixteenth century wealthy men and women began to furnish new rooms called studioli—private libraries where they could read, correspond, and think. Machiavelli had one, a retreat from his rural exile, in which he wrote The Prince. Montaigne had one in a tower on his estate, in which he wrote his essays.

But the study was never only a retreat from the world for the purpose of creative thought; it was also a stage for politics, religion, and even madness, as stories from Don Quixote to Prospero to Faustus remind us. Andrew Hui explains.


About the Guest

Andrew Hui is Associate Professor of the Humanities at Yale-NUS College in Singapore. His most recent book is The Study: The Inner Life of Renaissance Libraries.


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