The Compleat Gentleman, Third Revised Edition: The Modern Man's Guide to Chivalry

Written by:
Brad Miner
Narrated by:
Bob Souer

Unabridged Audiobook

Ratings
Book
1
Narrator
1
Release Date
May 2021
Duration
8 hours 54 minutes
Summary
At a time of astonishing confusion about what it means to be a man, Brad Miner has recovered the oldest and best ideal of manhood: the gentleman. Reviving a thousand-year tradition of chivalry, honor, and heroism, The Compleat Gentleman provides the essential model for twenty-first-century masculinity.

Despite our confusion, real manhood is not complicated. It is an ancient ideal based on service to one’s God, country, family, and friends—a simple but arduous ideal worthy of a lifetime of struggle.

Miner’s gentleman stands out for his dignity, restraint, and discernment. He rejects the notion that one way of behaving is as good as another. He belongs to an aristocracy of virtue, not of wealth or birth. Proposing neither a club nor a movement, Miner describes a lofty code of manly conduct, which, far from threatening democracy, is necessary for its survival.

Miner traces the concept of manliness from the jousting fields of the twelfth century to the decks of the Titanic. The three masculine archetypes that emerge—the warrior, the lover, and the monk—combine in the character of the “compleat gentleman.” This modern knight cultivates a martial spirit in defense of the true and the beautiful. He treats the opposite sex with the passionate respect required by courtly love. And he values learning in the pursuit of truth—all with the discretion, decorum, and nonchalance that the Renaissance called sprezzatura.

The Compleat Gentleman is filled with examples from the past and the present of the man our increasingly uncivilized age demands.
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Anonymous

i think that the content was good and I especially appreciated the historical surveys. the review of courtly love and view of women was excellent although i found the summary and conclusions being somewhat weak and ill thought through and almost cliche "the gentleman wants a woman to be whatever she wants to be." really? u go thru an interesting discussion about how courtly love was begun by eleanor of aquitaine and possibly anti-church and that's how u end the section? it's like putting a cherry on on whipped cream when u arent sure what u served is really dessert. so i think that section was incredibly strong but ended weakly. i think that the book could be strengthened by a more coherent framework that ends to an overall vision held by the authors of being a gentleman rather than only refrains from the past. i kept wanting him to share more about his own synthesis of prior scholars rather than just review of them.

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