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Ichthyology in Context (15001880) [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 742 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 1551 g
  • Sari: Intersections 87
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Dec-2023
  • Kirjastus: Brill
  • ISBN-10: 9004681175
  • ISBN-13: 9789004681170
  • Formaat: Hardback, 742 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x155 mm, kaal: 1551 g
  • Sari: Intersections 87
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Dec-2023
  • Kirjastus: Brill
  • ISBN-10: 9004681175
  • ISBN-13: 9789004681170
Ichthyology in Context (15001880) provides a broad spectre of early modern manifestations of human fascination with fish fish understood in the early modern sense of the term, as aquatilia: all aquatic animals, including sea mammals and crustaceans. It addresses the periods quickly growing knowledge about fish in its multiple, varied and rapidly changing interaction with culture. This topic is approached from various disciplines: history of science, cultural history, history of collections, historical ecology, art history, literary studies, and lexicology. Attention is given to the problematic questions of visual and textual representation of fish, and pre- and post-Linnean classification and taxonomy. This book also explores the transnational exchange of ichthyological knowledge and items in and outside Europe.









Contributors: Cristina Brito, Tobias Bulang, João Paulo S. Cabral, Florike Egmond, Dorothee Fischer, Holger Funk, Dirk Geirnaert, Philippe Glardon, Justin R. Hanisch, Bernardo Jerosch Herold, Rob Lenders, Alan Moss, Doreen Mueller, Johannes Müller, Martien J.P. van Oijen, Pietro Daniel Omodeo, Anne M. Overduin-de Vries, Theodore W. Pietsch, Cynthia Pyle, Marlise Rijks, Paul J. Smith, Ronny Spaans, Robbert Striekwold, Melinda Susanto, Didi van Trijp, Sabina Tsapaeva, and Ching-Ling Wang.

Arvustused

Intersections is an eminently useful [ ] series that collects recent scholarly essays on topics of interest to nearly every subfield in early modern studies. Anne Good, Reinhardt University. In: Itinerario, Vol. 35, No. 2 (August 2011), p. 106.

Acknowledgments


List of Figures


Notes on the Editors


Notes on the Contributors





1 Introduction: Towards a Cultural History of Early Modern Ichthyology
(15001880)


Paul J. Smith





Part 1: Beginnings


2 Fish Images True to Life and a 16th-Century Controversy between Rondelet
and Salviani. Essay and Documentation of the Sources


Holger Funk





3 Beginnings of Ichthyological Natural History: Formal and Structural
Questions


Philippe Glardon





4 The Many Names of Fish: Scientific and Poetic Fish Nomenclature in the
Writings of Johann Fischart and Conrad Gessner


Tobias Bulang





5 Aquatilia of Portugal in 15551556 According to Leonhardt Thurneysser zum
Thurn


Bernardo Jerosch Herold and João Paulo S. Cabral





Part 2: Depicting


6 Looking beyond the Margins of Print: Depicting Water Creatures in Europe,
c.15001620


Florike Egmond





7 Ichthyology and Related Topics in MS Urb. lat. 276 (13th17th Centuries)


Cynthia M. Pyle





8 A Taste for Fish: Paintings of Aquatic Animals in the Low Countries
(15601729)


Marlise Rijks





9 Fishing in the Past: Biodiversity, Art History, and Citizen Science
Preliminary Results


Anne M. Overduin-de Vries and Paul J. Smith





Part 3: Fish and Society in Europe


10 Piscatorial Elements in 16th-Century Literature in Bruges: Fantasy Scenes
and Compassionate Eulogies


Dirk Geirnaert





11 What Are the Fish Silent about? Selected Historical Facts on the Use of
Fish in Medieval Medicine


A Qualitative Study Based on Sources from The Middle Low German Dictionary
Archive


Sabina Tsapaeva





12 The Invisible Fisherman: The Economy of Water Knowledge in Early Modern
Venice


Pietro Daniel Omodeo





13 Um Grande Peixe, Dona Baleia da Costa: The Whale in Portuguese Early
Modern Natural History


Cristina Brito





14 My Eyes Have Never Yet Beheld Him. Demythologising Arctic Sea Monsters
in the Poetry of the Norwegian Priest and Fish Merchant Petter Dass
(16471707)


Ronny Spaans





15 The Historical Truth behind the Salmon-Servant Myth


Rob Lenders





16 Public Opinion on Seals in Dutch Newspapers 17251900


Paul J. Smith





Part 4: Ichthyological Knowledge from Afar


17 The Travelling Nautilus: Spaces of Circulation from the Indian Ocean to
Britain


Melinda Susanto





18 François de Meyers Fish Travelogue (1698)


Paul J. Smith, Didi van Trijp and Alan Moss





19 The Afterlives of Fish Far from Home: (Mis)Representations in the
Iconography of Preserved and Printed Pufferfish in 18th-Century Germany


Dorothee Fischer





20 Louis Renard (1678/16791746) and His Poissons, ecrevisses et crabes
(1719): 300 Years of One of Natural Historys most Curious Colour Plate
Books


Theodore W. Pietsch and Justin R. Hanisch





21 Distance, Geography, and Anecdote in M.E. Blochs Natural History of
Fishes


Johannes Müller





22 Between Science and Art: On Painted Natural Illustrations of Fish in
China


Ching-Ling Wang





23 Early Dutch Contributions to Japanese Ichthyology


Martien J.P. van Oijen





24 Packaging Knowledge about Whales in Early Modern Japan


Doreen Mueller





25 Images, Specimens, and Species: Hermann Schlegel on the Various Ways of
Depicting a Fish


Robbert Striekwold





Index Nominum


Index of Aquatic Animals
Paul J. Smith is Emeritus Professor of French Literature at Leiden University. His research focuses on 16th- and 17th-century French literature, its reception in the Netherlands, French and Dutch fable and emblem books, literary rhetoric and early modern natural history.





Florike Egmond is a historian affiliated with Leiden University. She has published widely on the early modern history of natural history, especially its social networks, information exchanges and visual culture, including Eye for Detail: Images of Plants and Animals in Art and Science (Reaktion 2017).