Academic Advising Center Advisors Database
Academic Advising Center
Arts & Sciences
Duke University

 HOME > Arts & Sciences > advising > Advisors    Search Help Login pdf version printable version 

Research Interests for John J. Martin

Research Interests:

John Jeffries Martin, Chair of the Department of History, is a historian of early modern Europe, with particular interests in the social, cultural, and intellectual history of Italy in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He is the author of Venice’s Hidden Enemies: Italian Heretics in a Renaissance City (1993), winner of the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize of the American Historical Association, and Myths of Renaissance Individualism (2004). In addition, he is the editor or co-editor of several volumes: Venice Reconsidered: The History and Civilization of an Italian City State (2002); The Renaissance: Italy and Abroad (2002); Heresy, Culture and Religion in Early Modern Italy: Contexts and Contestations (2006); and The Renaissance World (2007) as well as some fifty articles and essays. He is currently completing Crossing the Boundaries of Hercules: Knowledge, Faith, and Power in Early Modern Europe, a history of Europe from the late fifteenth to the early nineteenth century. Martin’s current research focuses on the history of torture in early modern Italy, a topic he is pursuing through a study of Francesco Casoni, a provincial intellectual, whose writings on evidence and the art of conjecture did much to undermine the need for the use of torture in the courts of Europe in the early modern period. Martin has been a fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, twice of the National Endowment of the Humanities, and has received support for his research from the American Philosophical Association, the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, and the Renaissance Society of America. He has lectured, as the Alphonse Dupront Chair, at the University of Paris-Sorbonne and, as Distinguished Visiting Scholar, at Victoria College, the University of Toronto. He also lectures frequently to broader publics, most recently through a series of presentations on early modern Europe through the Program in the Humanities and Human Values at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. With Richard Newhauser, Martin is editor of the series Vices & Virtues for Yale University Press.

Keywords:
Confession, History, History, Early Modern 1451-1600, Italy, Muser Mentor, Prayer, Renaissance, Repentance, Self, Sexuality, Sincerity, Torture, venice (italy)--history--1508-1797, Venice (italy)--history--1508-1797
Current projects:
Crossing the Boundaries of Hercules: Knowledge, Faith, and Power in Early Modern Europe, nearing completion.
Recent Publications
  1. Martin, JJ; Bragagnolo, M, Physiognomy and Visual Judgment in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, vol. 54 no. 1 (January, 2024), pp. 1-7 [doi]
  2. Martin, JJ, The Art of Conjecture: A Window into the Heart, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, vol. 54 no. 1 (January, 2024), pp. 33-56 [doi]
  3. Martin, JJ, The Spiritual Globe, New Global Studies, vol. 16 no. 2 (July, 2022), pp. 175-192 [doi[abs]
  4. Martin, JJ, Montaigne's elusive self: An essay, in Historicizing Life-Writing and Egodocuments in Early Modern Europe (January, 2022), pp. 19-38, ISBN 9783030824822 [doi[abs]
  5. Martin, JJ, A Beautiful Ending: The Apocalyptic Imagination and the Making of the Modern World (January, 2022), pp. 1-323, ISBN 9780300247329 [abs]

Duke University * Arts & Sciences * Advisors * Peer advisors * Staff * Reload * Login