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oapen-20.500.12657-536332022-03-29T02:56:43Z Scriver dei figli Ferrari, Monica Morandi, Matteo Piseri, Federico Rochwert-Zuili, Patricia Thieulin-Pardo, Hélène History of education, Europe XIV-XVIII centuries History of childhood, Europe XIV-XVIII centuries History of the family, Europe XIV-XVIII centuries Epistolary exchanges Educational strategies during the Ancien Régime Pedagogical practices for the élites Educational devices in the court society The ages of life and the construction of social roles Epistolary novels History of educational historiography bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JN Education::JNB History of education bic Book Industry Communication::Y Children's, Teenage & educational::YQ Educational material::YQH Educational: History Starting from the end of the Middle Ages and throughout the early modern era, there was a vast diffusion of the letter form, developed in the chancelleries of European courts and among elites according to canons that blended the rhetoric and chancery tradition with humanistic knowledge. The epistolary style suits the transmission of information and political decisions as well as a frequent exchange of everyday life news, revealing, at both public and private levels, a web of interpersonal relationships and, along with it, evidence of feelings that create ‘emotional communities’ to which, in many of the cases examined here, individuals looking for social recognition belong. 2022-03-28T15:31:55Z 2022-03-28T15:31:55Z 2021 book ONIX_20220328_9788835132769_14 9788835132769 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/53633 ita Storia/Studi e ricerche application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9788835132769.pdf https://series.francoangeli.it/index.php/oa/catalog/view/745/584/4440 FrancoAngeli Starting from the end of the Middle Ages and throughout the early modern era, there was a vast diffusion of the letter form, developed in the chancelleries of European courts and among elites according to canons that blended the rhetoric and chancery tradition with humanistic knowledge. The epistolary style suits the transmission of information and political decisions as well as a frequent exchange of everyday life news, revealing, at both public and private levels, a web of interpersonal relationships and, along with it, evidence of feelings that create ‘emotional communities’ to which, in many of the cases examined here, individuals looking for social recognition belong. e2ddfb5e-9202-4851-8afe-1e09b020b018 9788835132769 361 Milan open access
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Starting from the end of the Middle Ages and throughout the early modern era, there was a vast diffusion of the letter form, developed in the chancelleries of European courts and among elites according to canons that blended the rhetoric and chancery tradition with humanistic knowledge. The epistolary style suits the transmission of information and political decisions as well as a frequent exchange of everyday life news, revealing, at both public and private levels, a web of interpersonal relationships and, along with it, evidence of feelings that create ‘emotional communities’ to which, in many of the cases examined here, individuals looking for social recognition belong.
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