Modernity for Fools and Knaves: Machiavelli’s Mandragola and Shakespeare’s All’s Well That Ends Well

Title

Modernity for Fools and Knaves: Machiavelli’s Mandragola and Shakespeare’s All’s Well That Ends Well

Description

Audio recording of a lecture given by tutor Frank Pagano on March 29, 2024 as part of the Dean's Lecture & Concert Series. The Dean's Office has provided this description of the event: “In chapter 15 of The Prince Machiavelli famously recommends “going to the effectual truth of the thing rather than to the imagination of it.” If political writers wish to be effective, then they must act on the truth that all the world is comprised of fools and knaves. This fact turns out to be a great good fortune because the fools and knaves can be tricked into Machiavellian orders. The premise of the lecture is that we moderns have been twice tricked into the contemporary order of things. Machiavelli’s comedy, Mandragola, displays the first trick. It portrays a young man who forms a conspiracy to convince a (beautiful) married woman to sleep with him. The conspiracy includes her husband, mother and confessor. The Machiavellian conspiracy is an enterprise to subdue the Christian conscience. It is wildly successful, and the comedy ends as the conspirators happily march to church together. The second trickster is Francis Bacon. He does not openly expose his trick, but Shakespeare does in the comedy (?) All’s Well That Ends Well. It presents a clever woman who conspires to trick a willful man into consummating unwillingly their marriage. He is tricked into destroying the virtue of filial piety. The marriage is consummated, but All’s Well does not end as the Mandragola. Who are the fools?”

Publisher

Coverage

Santa Fe, NM

Date

2024-03-29

Rights

Meem Library has been given permission to make this item available online.

Type

sound

Format

mp3

Language

English

Identifier

SFPaganoF_Modernity_for_Fools_and_Knaves_2024-03-29

Original Format

m4a

Duration

01:06:44