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E-raamat: Hollow Men: Writing, Objects, and Public Image in Renaissance Italy

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Mar-2013
  • Kirjastus: Fordham University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780823252176
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Mar-2013
  • Kirjastus: Fordham University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780823252176

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"Analyzes texts and art objects from the 15th to the late 16th centuries to show that Renaissance theories of emulating classical heroes generated a deep skepticism about representation, as these theories forced men to construct a public image that seemed fixed but could adapt to changing circumstances"--

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 skepticism 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 dedecline 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.

Arvustused

"This smart and engaging book argues that from the mid-fifteenth century onward, Italian courtiers, authors, and artists understood exemplarily as the negotiation between the hidden inside of a person and the words, actions, or images that reveal that person to the world." -- Maarten Delbeke -Renaissance Quarterly " In Gaylard's persuasive reading, the faltering transmission of ancient virtues find increasing compensation in the pre formative posture, that monumental pose in which timeless values and pellucid examples rematerialize as self-conscious representation." -- Eileen Reeves -Modern Language Quarterly "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 "Gaylard undertakes a richly detailed, fascinating inquiry into the ways in which early modern theories of imitation (rhetorical and corporeal) intersect with practices of representation used by contemporaries to convey verbal and visual images of exemplary individuals, especially notable figures from the classical past, to quattrocento and cinquecento audiences." -Choice

Muu info

Commended for Choice: Outstanding Academic Title 2014.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
Acknowledgments ix
I MONUMENTS, IMITATION, AND THE NOBLE IDEAL IN EARLY RENAISSANCE ITALY
Introduction: Reinventing Nobility? Artifacts and the Monumental Pose from Petrarch to Platina
1(30)
1 How to Perform Like a Statue: Ghirlandaio, Pontano, and Exemplarity
31(33)
2 From Castrated Statues to Empty Colossi: Emasculation vs. Monumentality in Bembo, Castiglione, and the Sala Paolina
64(59)
II PRINT MONUMENTS, EXPOSURE, AND STRATEGIES OF CONCEALMENT
3 Banishing the Hollow Man: Print, Clothing, and Aretino's Emblems of Truth
123(37)
4 Heroes with Damp Brains? Image vs. Text in Printed Portrait-Books
160(67)
5 Silenus Strategies: The Failure of Personal Emblems
227(60)
Afterword 287(8)
Notes 295(40)
Works Cited 335(24)
Index 359
Susan Gaylard is Assistant Professor of Italian at the University of Washington.