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English Gothic Misericord Carvings: History from the Bottom Up: Art and Material Culture in Medieval and Renaissance Europe, cartea 9

Autor Betsy Chunko-Dominguez
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 mar 2017
English Gothic Misericord Carvings: History from the Bottom Up by Betsy Chunko-Dominguez is the first book to move beyond textual dependence and traditional iconographic analysis when examining misericords. It likewise builds the most thorough discussion to date of the relationship between the misericord’s several potential audiences – including patron, craftsman, occupant of the seat, and modern viewer.
Beyond the bounds of misericord studies, there are implications here for study of the relationship between center and margin in late medieval art; and, indeed, what constitutes ‘center’ and ‘margin’ as conceptual realms. Ultimately, this book attempts both to re-integrate the study of misericords into the study of Gothic art in general, and to re-center them in relation to our understanding of late medieval culture.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004341180
ISBN-10: 9004341188
Pagini: 192
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Art and Material Culture in Medieval and Renaissance Europe


Notă biografică

Betsy Chunko-Dominguez, Ph.D. (2012), University of Virginia, is Professor of Art History at the Savannah College of Art and Design. Her research focuses on forms of late medieval marginalia.

Cuprins

Contents
Acknowledgments vii
List of Illustrations viii
Notes on Permissions xi
List of Abbreviations xii
Introduction: History from the “Bottom Up” 1
1 Meaning(s) and Medieval Misericords 7
Literacy and the Viewer 9
An Iconographic Dilemma 13
Signa and Res 21
The Case for Hybridity 30
2 Violent Women and the Clerical Gaze 33
Touch and Trope 38
“Wykked Wyves” 45
The Clerical Gaze 51
3 The Abject and Uncanny Human Form 55
Illness and Abjection 57
Scatology and Obscaena 65
Ungodly Peoples 71
Conflated Realities 76
4 The Subject as Sign: Iconography of the Lay Classes 85
Images and Fiction 88
At Home and in the Fields 94
“Folk” Iconography 105
Peasants Behaving Badly 111
5 Image and Anxiety: Iconography of Hell and Damnation 121
To Partake with Devils 123
Dark Visions, Corporeal Fears 128
Doleful Realities 136
Afterword: The Vanishing Mediator 143
Appendix: Dating the Misericords of Fairford 149
Bibliography 160
Index 182

Recenzii

"The fabulous panoply of scenes carved into the misericords that once supported the bottoms of medieval monks and canons across England is ripe for an important new treatment, and in Betsy Chunko-Dominguez it has found a suitably erudite and appreciative investigator.[...] a succinct,pithy and broad survey of the medieval interpretive field and a brilliant application of visual analysis, an important historicisation of and corrective to a somewhat neglected subject."
Gabriel Byng, Clare Hall, Cambridge, in Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 70 (2019), 152-153.

''Betsy Chunko-Dominguez’s volume makes a significant contribution to the study of specifically English misericord iconography, engaging with recent work in ways that build upon current thinking and, appropriately, offer a stimulating challenge to the views of these authors. Her work engages more fully with critical theory than that of the aforementioned authors, and does so in a way that is purposeful, and that illuminates her subject while avoiding the excesses that can all too often cloud the overly theoretical. Indeed, the writing has a clarity that may be easily understood by the keen nonspecialist [...] The field of misericord studies is still underexplored, and this considered—and, crucially, excellently illustrated—volume makes a valuable contribution to our approaches to this fascinating and often perplexing body of carvings and, more broadly, to the complex material articulations of life and belief in the late Middle Ages''.
Paul Hardwick, in Speculum 94/3 (2019), 819-821.