In 1577, the Jesuit Priest Matteo Ricci set out from Italy to bring Christian faith and Western thought to Ming dynasty China. To capture the complex emotional and religious drama of Ricci's extraordinary life, Jonathan Spence relates his subject's experiences with several images that Ricci himself created--four images derived from the events in the Bible and others from a book on the art of memory that Ricci wrote in Chinese and circulated among members of the Ming dynasty elite. A rich and compelling narrative about a fascinating life, The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci is also a significant work of global history, juxtaposing the world of Counter-Reformation Europe with that of Ming China.
Georgetown senior fellow, @newyorker contributor, @FSGBooks alum, author of THE LIFE YOU SAVE MAY BE YOUR OWN and REINVENTING BACH
THE MEMORY PALACE OF MATTEO RICCI, by Jonathan Spence, who died this week at 85, is the book that, for me, more than any other, opened up the Jesuit imagination - & showed how an essentially imaginative spirituality can shape the literary work itself https://t.co/dIC3kkW06J
Org theory loyalist w social innov tendencies, concern for nascent mkts, systembuilding/unbuilding. U Oxford, Wolfson College; former Stanford, Northwestern
Oh, dear. The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci had a profound impact on me. This is indeed sad news of Prof Spence's passing. @Zhaomen49818832 https://t.co/hMbjbnD8Ja
"An extraordinarily delicate achievement . . . Resembles the portrait of an age."
--The New York Times Book Review
"A gripping portrait of late-sixteenth-century cultural history in both the West and the East."
--Natalie Zemon Davis, Princeton University, author of The Return of Martin Guerre
"An extraordinary tour de force, a work of literature and at the same time a remarkable wide-ranging use of historical sources. This is the kind of history that most people in the profession cannot even begin to write."
--John King Fairbank, Harvard University