“The great divide in the
perception of the beauty of life comes much more between the Renaissance and
the modern period than between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The
turnabout occurs at the point where art and life begin to diverge. It is the
point where art begins to be no longer in the midst of life, as a noble part of
the joy of life itself, but outside of life as something to be highly
venerated, as something to turn to in moments of edification or rest.”
Huizinga joined the
faculty at Leiden University in 1915. The Nazis held him in detention for two
months in 1942. After his release he was forbidden to return to his position as
professor of history at Leiden. He died three months before the German
surrender. In The Autumn of the Middle Ages he writes:
''The things which can
make life enjoyable remain the same. They are, now as before, reading, music,
fine arts, travel, the enjoyment of nature, sports, fashion, social vanity
(knightly orders, honorary offices, gatherings) and the intoxication of the
senses.''
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