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Hollow Men – Writing, Objects, and Public Image in Renaissance Italy

Autor Susan Gaylard
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 mar 2013
This book relates developments in the visual arts and printing to humanist theories of literary and bodily imitation, bringing together 15th- and 16th-century frescoes, statues, coins, letters, dialogues, epic poems, personal emblems, and printed collections of portraits. Its interdisciplinary analyses show that Renaissance theories of emulating classical heroes generated a deep scepticism about self-presentation, ultimately contributing to a new awareness of representation as representation.Hollow Men shows that the Renaissance questioning of "interiority" derived from a visual ideal, the monument that was the basis of teachings about imitation. In fact, the decline of exemplary pedagogy and the emergence of modern masculine subjectivity were well under way in the mid-15th century, and that these changes were hastened by the rapid development of the printed image.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780823251742
ISBN-10: 0823251748
Pagini: 372
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Wiley

Recenzii

"This is an extremely interesting and original study of how suspiciously--indeed, critically--Renaissance artists and writers approached the classical concept of the exemplar--an admired figure summed up in some sort of writing, and especially image, as worthy of belief and imitation for later generations." Ann Rosalind Jones, Smith College"Susan Gaylard has produced a powerfully suggestive study of the relation between writing and the desire for a kind of secular personal permanence that was the closest thing to immortality in the estimation of Italians during the century and a half before 1600." Walter Stephens, The John Hopkins University

Descriere

Analyses texts and art objects from the 15th to the late 16th centuries to show that Renaissance theories of emulating classical heroes generated a deep scepticism about representation