Special issue of I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance: Shared Spaces and Knowledge Transactions in the Italian Renaissance City (Volume 19, issue 1)
- Submitting institution
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Birkbeck College
- Unit of assessment
- 28 - History
- Output identifier
- De Vivo 1
- Type
- B - Edited book
- DOI
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- Publisher
- The University of Chicago Press
- ISBN
- 00-0000-0000
- Open access status
- Out of scope for open access requirements
- Month of publication
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- Year of publication
- 2016
- URL
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- Supplementary information
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- Request cross-referral to
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- Output has been delayed by COVID-19
- No
- COVID-19 affected output statement
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- Forensic science
- No
- Criminology
- No
- Interdisciplinary
- No
- Number of additional authors
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- Research group(s)
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- Proposed double-weighted
- No
- Reserve for an output with double weighting
- No
- Additional information
- Shared Spaces and Knowledge Transactions in the Italian Renaissance City arose from a conference held at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg in 2014 and planned by de Vivo together with the other two editors while they were fellows at Villa I Tatti, the Harvard Center for Italian Renaissance Studies in 2011-12 (they initially planned this conference with a fourth fellow of the Center, who sadly died that year: the special issue is dedicated to her memory). A historian of Renaissance art, a medieval historian, and an early modern historian, Neilson, Cossar and De Vivo collaborated fully on the conference and the volume to explore the interdisciplinary significance of located approaches to the history of knowledge. Together, they prepared a successful grant application from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada to fund the conference. They selected pre-circulated papers (by among others historians of art, architecture, music and science as well as social historians). And they used the conference to workshop the papers for further revision. Together, they secured an agreement from the editors of I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance to consider publication subject to peer-reviewing. De Vivo wrote about one-third of the introduction, but he and the other editors fully collaborated in revising the whole introduction. They co-ordinated the authors’ responses to peer-review together, and shared the articles for editing. De Vivo also contributed one of the eight articles featured in the special issue De Vivo also contributed his own article, “Walking in Sixteenth-Century Venice: Mobilizing the Early Modern City” (pp. 115-141). We are asking that this article be assessed alongside De Vivo’s overall editorial work as well as the co-written introduction.
- Author contribution statement
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- Non-English
- No
- English abstract
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