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Cultural Study of Mary and the Annunciation: From Luke to the Enlightenment [Kõva köide]

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This book traces the history of the Annunciation, exploring the deep and lasting impact of the event on the Western imagination. Waller explores the Annunciation from its appearance in Luke’s Gospel, to its rise to prominence in religious doctrine and popular culture, and its gradual decline in importance during the Enlightenment.
Acknowledgements vii
List of Figures
xi
1 History and Historia: Reading the Annunciation Story from the Sixteenth and Twenty-First Centuries
1(16)
2 The Annunciation: Multiple Texts, Multiple Stories
17(20)
3 Constructing the Invented Traditions of the Annunciation Story: Angel, Virgin, Conception
37(14)
4 Constructing the Invented Traditions of the Annunciation Story: Motherhood, Obedience, Humility
51(18)
5 Visualizing the Annunciation: The Anxiety of Representation
69(24)
6 Annunciation Site Relics: The Invented Traditions of Nazareth, Loreto and Walsingham
93(18)
7 `Being in Her is Like Being in Heaven': The Annunciation in Early Modern Catholicism
111(22)
8 `Full of Grace' or `Highly Favoured'? Erasmus, the Annunciation and the Protestant Cultural Revolution
133(16)
9 `Verkundigung nach Tizian' (The Annunciation after Titian) and the Disenchantment of the Early Modern World
149(16)
Works Cited 165(22)
Notes 187(28)
Index 215
Gary Waller is Professor of Literature and Cultural Studies at Purchase College, SUNY. He taught as Donaldson Bye Fellow at Magdalene College, Cambridge and at the Universities of Auckland, Dalhousie, Wilfrid Laurier, Carnegie Mellon and Hartford. Recent books include The Virgin Mary in late Medieval and Early Modern Literature and Popular Culture (2011) and Walsingham and the English Imagination (2011).