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E-book: Investigating Art, History, and Literature with Astronomy: Determining Time, Place, and Other Hidden Details Linked to the Stars

  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Series: Springer Praxis Books
  • Pub. Date: 17-Mar-2022
  • Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030955540
  • Format - PDF+DRM
  • Price: 40,74 €*
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  • This ebook is for personal use only. E-Books are non-refundable.
  • Format: PDF+DRM
  • Series: Springer Praxis Books
  • Pub. Date: 17-Mar-2022
  • Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030955540

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How can shadows determine the date and time of a painting by Johannes Vermeer? How did the Moon and tides cause the loss of King Johns crown jewels?





In his newest book, Professor Olson, author of Celestial Sleuth and Further Adventures of the Celestial Sleuth, explores how astronomical clues can uncover fascinating new details about art, history, and literature. He begins with an accessible introduction to amateur celestial sleuthing, showing how to use your astronomical knowledge, software, archives, vintage maps, historical letters and diaries, military records, and other resources to investigate the past.







Follow along as Professor Olson then explores twenty real-world cases where astronomy has helped answer unresolved questions or correct longstanding interpretations about an event. Examples involve artists such as Vermeer, Monet, and OKeeffe; the historical exploits of Alexander the Great, the desert travels of the Death Valley 49ers, and ameeting between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill in Marrakech; and literary works by Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Longfellow.







Packed with dozens of full-color illustrations, this book will enrich your knowledge of the past and equip you with all the tools youll need to become a celestial sleuth yourself.







Many people have a passion for art, or world history, or great literature, or even astronomy but seldom in all these things at once. This remarkable book by Donald Olson of Texas State University will put you in touch with such seemingly unrelated endeavors. It will open your eyes and broaden your mind as little else could.







Roger W. Sinnott, Sky & Telescope

Reviews

I found myself marvelling at just how much Olson and his team were able to add to the information about the work of art or the historical event, and I read every word of this book. All I can say is that Im glad to have read it and will be happy to have it on my bookshelves. (Robert Connon Smith, The Observatory, Vol. 143 (1292), February, 2023)

Dedication v
Foreword vi
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xv
Part I Methods of Celestial Sleuthing
1 Astronomy Software, Learning About Locations, Sunlight and Shadows, and Weather Archives
2(31)
2 Letters, Almanacs, Timetables, and Foreign Languages
33(24)
3 Research Trips, Method of Corresponding Days, Timekeeping
57(17)
Part II Examples of Astronomy in Art
4 Vermeer and Monet: Masters of Sunlight and Shadows, and the Moon in J. M. W. Turner's First Oil Paintings
74(41)
5 Georgia O'Keeffe's Night Skies, Kawase Hasui and Nocturnal Scenes in Japan
115(44)
Part III Examples of Astronomy in History
6 The Campaigns of Alexander the Great, and King John and the Loss of the Crown Jewels
159(34)
7 Mont Saint-Michel in the Hundred Years' War, and the Discovery of the Gegenschein
193(36)
8 Death Valley '49ers, Roosevelt and Churchill in Marrakech, and World War II and the Moon
229(59)
Part IV Examples of Astronomy in Literature
9 Astronomy in Literature: Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Longfellow
288(37)
Part V Example of Terrestrial Sleuthing
10 Death Valley, Dante's View, and Mount Whitney
325(9)
Index 334
Donald W. Olson is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Physics at Texas State University. He received his B. S. (Physics) from Michigan State University and a Ph. D. (Physics) from the University of California at Berkeley, then went on to conduct post-doctoral research at Cornell University and the University of Texas at Austin. At Texas State University, Olson taught an Honors College course linking science and the humanities, and the Texas State group has published more than 50 articles using astronomy to solve mysteries in art, history, and literature. In 2014 the American Association of Physics Teachers honored Olson with the Paul Klopsteg Award, which recognizes outstanding communication of the excitement of contemporary physics and astronomy to the general public. In 2015 Olson was named a Regents Professor, the highest honor of the Texas State University system. His two previous Springer books are Celestial Sleuth (2014) and Further Adventures of the Celestial Sleuth (2018).