Mental Libraries: The Reception of the Arts of Memory in Literature and Culture explores the enduring legacy of mnemonic systems across literature, visual arts, pedagogy, and cultural production.
Mental Libraries: The Reception of the Arts of Memory in Literature and Culture explores the enduring legacy of mnemonic systems across literature, visual arts, pedagogy, and cultural production.
Centered on the metaphor of the "mental library," this collection reveals how memory practices functioned as tools for knowledge storage as well as generative frameworks for creativity and invention. The 13 essays trace the reception, adaptation, and transformation of the ars memoriae from late medieval Europe to early modern Spain, Italy, France, and Latin America. Contributors examine canonical figures like Petrarch, Bruno, and Burton, alongside lesser-explored thinkers such as Bartolomeo da Mantova, Zorrilla, and Carrara. With insights from renowned scholars such as Lina Bolzoni and Luis Merino Jerez, the volume offers fresh perspectives on the cultural and intellectual impact of mnemonic systems.
Rich in visual content and interdisciplinary analysis, Mental Libraries bridges past and present, inviting readers to rethink the role of memory in shaping knowledge, literature, and culture.
List of Contributors; Foreword: The Art of Memory and a New Season of
Studies; Introduction: Mental Libraries. The Reception of the Arts of Memory
in Literature and Culture; PART I: Crafting the Mental Library: Memory
Systems and their Cultural Contexts;
1. The Use of Major and Minor Loci in
the Liber Memoriae Artificialis by Bartolomeo da Mantova (1429);
2. The
Enchantment of Memory: Observations on Giordano Brunos Cantus Circaeus;
3.
Pedagogy of Memory: Albertus Carraras De Omnibus Ingeniis Augendae Memoriae;
4. Traduttore, traditore? How Early Mnemonic Knowledge Is Shaped by
Translations;
5. The Body as a Mnemonic Aid for Learning Grammar;
6.
Diagrammatizing the Art of Memory: Two Examples of Tree Diagrams in Mnemonic
Treatises from the 15th Century; PART II: Reimagining the Mental Library:
Cultural and Literary Transformations of Memory;
7. Encyclopedic Mnemonics in
Diego Valadés Rhetorica Christiana;
8. The Machiavellian Movement: Acquiring
Virtues through the Body;
9. Burtons Mental Library: The Anatomy of
Melancholy and the Art of Memory;
10. Mnemotechnics, Vision, and Apocrypha.
Sources of imagines agentes in Middle English Drama;
11. Memory in De sacris
concionibus recte formandis (Rome, 1543) by Alfonso Zorrilla;
12. The
Geography of Memory and Hispanic Poets of the Golden Age;
13. Local Memory
and Literary Landscape in Petrarch; Index
Julia Domínguez is a Professor of Spanish and the Director of the Latin American and Iberian Studies Program at the University of Delaware, where she also serves as a fellow in the ACHIEVE Program. She is the co-editor of the book series The Early Modern Exchange for the University of Delaware Press. Her work explores the intersections of literature, history, and memory, with a focus on the arts of memory, the history of science, and their impact on early modern culture. She is the author of Quixotic Memories: Cervantes and Memory in Early Modern Spain (2022), the editor of Cervantes in Perspective (2012), and the coeditor of Hispanic Studies in Honor of Robert L. Fiore (2009). Her recent scholarship examines how mnemonic systems shaped literary and visual culture in early modern Spain and Latin America.