Figurations and Sensations of the Unseen in Judaism, Christianity and Islam: Contested Desires: Bloomsbury Studies in Material Religion
Editat de Birgit Meyer, Terje Stordalenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 dec 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350225756
ISBN-10: 1350225754
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 60 colour
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Material Religion
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350225754
Pagini: 352
Ilustrații: 60 colour
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Studies in Material Religion
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Challenges common assumptions that the monotheistic traditions do not have material representations of the supernatural world
Notă biografică
Birgit Meyer is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands.Terje Stordalen is Professor of Hebrew Bible and Old Testament Studies at the University of Oslo, Norway and Visiting Professor at the Institute of Law, Aalborg University, Denmark.
Cuprins
Introduction: Figurations and Sensations of the Unseen in Judaism, Christianity and Islam Part I: Reconfiguring the Image Question 1. Imagining Solomon's Temple: Aesthetics of the Non-Representable, Terje Stordalen (University of Oslo, Norway) 2. Seeing with the Ear, Recognizing with the Heart: Rethinking the Ontology of the Mimetic Arts in Islam, Wendy Shaw (Free University Berlin, Germany) 3. The Hypericon of the Golden Calf, Yvonne Sherwood (University of Kent, UK) 4. Idolatry Beyond the Second Commandment: Conflicting Figurations and Sensations of the Unseen, Birgit Meyer (Utrecht University, the Netherlands) Part II: Genealogies of Figuration 5: Beyond 'Image Ban' and 'Aniconism': Reconfiguring Ancient Israelite and Early Jewish Religion(s) in a Visual and Material Religion Perspective, Christoph Uehlinger (University of Zürich, Switzerland) 6. Visual Images in Medieval Jewish Culture Before the Age of Art, Kalman P. Bland (Duke University, USA) 7: Real Absence: Images of God in Turco-Persian Painting, 1300-1600 CE, Christiane Gruber (University of Michigan, USA) 8. Celestial Desires: Figuration and Sensation in Persian Devotional Shiite Mural Paintings, Pedram Khosronejad (Oklahoma State University, USA)Part III: Figurations and Sensations - Lives and Regimes 9: Aesthetic Sensations of Mary: The Miraculous Icon of Meryem Ana and the Dynamics of Interreligious Relations in Antakya, Jens Kreinath (Wichitia State University, USA) 10: Photographic Practices and the 'Aesthetics of Withdrawal' among Muslims of the East African Coast, Heike Behrend (University of Cologne, Germany) 11: Moulded Imaginaries: Icons, Idols, and the Sensory Environments of Eastern Orthodox Christianity, Sonja Luehrmann (Simon Fraser University, Canada) Part IV: Desires for the Unseen: Art and Religion 12: From Ponte St. Angelo to the Cathedral of St. Peter: Figuration and Sensation in Bernini's Pilgrimage Path in Rome, Øyvind Norderval (University of Oslo, Norway)13: Figuration and ?Aesthetics of the Sublime': Aspects of their Interplay in Christian Art, Else Marie Bukdahl (University of Aalborg, Denmark)14: Seeing, Hearing, and Narrating Salome. Modernist Sensual Aesthetics and the Role of Narrative Blanks, Ulrike Brunotte (Maastricht University, the Netherlands) 15: The Art of Incarnation: Loss and Return of Religion in Houellebecq's Submission, Christiane Kruse (Muthesius Kunsthochschule, Germany) Afterword, The Visual Culture of Revelation, David Morgan (Duke University, USA)Bibliography Index
Recenzii
Ambitious ... highly interesting.
This is a bold and ambitious volume, not only in its conceptual scope, but also for its range of disciplinary perspectives and comparative focus. Taken together, the essays convey the vibrancy of religious studies today, as well as the centrality of approaches that take account of materiality and the senses. A must-have book for all serious students of the role of images within Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions.
Combining theoretical sophistication with a vital awareness of historical diversity, this book provides a series of refreshing studies of the broad repertoire of mediations of, and contentions over, the unseen realm. It moves beyond the normative preference for the word as the singular canonical medium of Judaism, Christianity and religion and pictorial media.
In the study of visual culture, it is hard to imagine a subject of investigation more important and telling than the tension between invisibility and visibility. For the visual cultures of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, this book explores that tension with sophistication, precision, and aplomb. It is essential reading.
This is a bold and ambitious volume, not only in its conceptual scope, but also for its range of disciplinary perspectives and comparative focus. Taken together, the essays convey the vibrancy of religious studies today, as well as the centrality of approaches that take account of materiality and the senses. A must-have book for all serious students of the role of images within Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions.
Combining theoretical sophistication with a vital awareness of historical diversity, this book provides a series of refreshing studies of the broad repertoire of mediations of, and contentions over, the unseen realm. It moves beyond the normative preference for the word as the singular canonical medium of Judaism, Christianity and religion and pictorial media.
In the study of visual culture, it is hard to imagine a subject of investigation more important and telling than the tension between invisibility and visibility. For the visual cultures of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, this book explores that tension with sophistication, precision, and aplomb. It is essential reading.