RISS 학술연구정보서비스

검색
다국어 입력

http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.

변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.

예시)
  • 中文 을 입력하시려면 zhongwen을 입력하시고 space를누르시면됩니다.
  • 北京 을 입력하시려면 beijing을 입력하시고 space를 누르시면 됩니다.
닫기
    인기검색어 순위 펼치기

    RISS 인기검색어

      검색결과 좁혀 보기

      선택해제

      오늘 본 자료

      • 오늘 본 자료가 없습니다.
      더보기
      • "The skylfullest men": Patronage, authority, and the negotiation of expertise in Elizabethan England

        Ash, Eric H Princeton University 2000 해외박사(DDOD)

        RANK : 231983

        Throughout Western Europe, the growth of the early modern nation-state involved a marked expansion in the areas of competence claimed by central administrators, who as a result were frequently faced with managerial challenges to which they were unaccustomed. Tudor England provides a case in point: the growing power and jurisdiction of the English Privy Council under Queen Elizabeth forced them to develop new administrative techniques to facilitate tighter central control over greater distances. As England became wealthier and more powerful, the demand for new technologies in navigation, warfare, and manufacturing increased, among royal officers and corporate investors alike. The proliferation of large-scale, technically complex, corporate and state-sponsored projects required central administrators to locate and manage individuals who possessed the skills, knowledge, and experience necessary to get the job done successfully and economically. Although the administrators nominally controlled the projects in question, they lacked the kind of expert knowledge they were attempting to find and manage, giving the technical experts a greater degree of power than other clients possessed. After gaining the personal and professional trust of their patrons, expert clients were responsible not only for overseeing their projects, but for keeping patrons well apprised of the projects' progress and difficulties as well. Such “expert mediators” became a cornerstone of centralized management in Elizabethan England. This dissertation consists of a series of case studies, which focus on the redesign and reconstruction of Dover harbor (1576–1585), deep-shaft copper mining in northwestern England (1560–1575), and the adoption and development of mathematical methods of navigation (1550–1600). From one case to the next, the expert mediators gradually succeeded in winning the trust and support of powerful courtly patrons and corporate investors, while at the same time distancing themselves intellectually and socially from the more common sort of practitioner through their rare possession of theoretical, reform program of Francis Bacon, and suggests that Bacon drew inspiration for his plan from the English culture of expertise in which he sought patronage himself as a young man.

      연관 검색어 추천

      이 검색어로 많이 본 자료

      활용도 높은 자료

      해외이동버튼