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Emphasizing on the one hand the reconstruction of the material
culture of specific residences, and on the other, the way in which
particular domestic objects reflect, shape, and mediate family
values and relationships within the home, this volume offers a
distinct contribution to research on the early modern Italian
domestic interior. Though the essays mainly take an art historical
approach, the book is interdisciplinary in that it considers the
social implications of domestic objects for family members of
different genders, age, and rank, as well as for visitors to the
home. By adopting a broad chronological framework that encompasses
both Renaissance and Baroque Italy, and by expanding the regional
scope beyond Florence and Venice to include domestic interiors from
less studied centers such as Urbino, Ferrara, and Bologna, this
collection offers genuinely new perspectives on the home in early
modern Italy.
The goal of the twelve essays in this volume, contributed by
scholars in the fields of history, literature, art history, and
medicine, is to enrich our understanding of cultural discourses on
ageing in early modern Europe. While a number of books examine old
age in other eras, and a few touch on the early modern period, this
is the first to focus explicitly on representations of ageing in
Europe from 1350-1700. These studies invite the reader to take a
closer look at images of ageing; they show that representations are
embedded in specific communities, life situations, and structures
of power. As well, the book explores how representations of old age
function in various and often surprising ways: as repositories of
socio-cultural anxieties, as strategies of self-fashioning, and as
instruments of ideology capable of disciplining the body and the
body politic. Since this book is about how old age as a cultural
category was produced and maintained through representation, the
essays in this volume are organised thematically across geographic,
disciplinary, and media boundaries to foreground the politics and
poetics of representational strategies. The contributors to this
collection show that our understanding not only of ageing, but also
of power, subjectivity, gender, sexuality, and the body is enriched
by the study of cultural representations of old age. Through
sensitive and sophisticated readings of a wide range of sources,
these papers collectively demonstrate the formative influence and
generative force of images of old age within early modern European
culture.
Emphasizing on the one hand the reconstruction of the material
culture of specific residences, and on the other, the way in which
particular domestic objects reflect, shape, and mediate family
values and relationships within the home, this volume offers a
distinct contribution to research on the early modern Italian
domestic interior. Though the essays mainly take an art historical
approach, the book is interdisciplinary in that it considers the
social implications of domestic objects for family members of
different genders, age, and rank, as well as for visitors to the
home. By adopting a broad chronological framework that encompasses
both Renaissance and Baroque Italy, and by expanding the regional
scope beyond Florence and Venice to include domestic interiors from
less studied centers such as Urbino, Ferrara, and Bologna, this
collection offers genuinely new perspectives on the home in early
modern Italy.
Though portraits of old women mediate cultural preoccupations just
as effectively as those of younger women, the scant published
research on images of older women belies their significance within
early modern Italy. This study examines the remarkable flowering,
largely overlooked in portraiture scholarship to date, of portraits
of old women in Northern Italy and especially Bologna during the
second half of the sixteenth century, when, as a result of
religious reform, the lives of women and the family came under
increasing scrutiny. Old Women and Art in the Early Modern Italian
Domestic Interior draws on a wide range of primary visual sources,
including portraits, religious images, architectural views, prints
and drawings, as well as extant palazzi and case, furnishings, and
domestic objects created by the leading artists in Bologna,
including Lavinia Fontana, Bartolomeo Passerotti, Denys Calvaert,
and the Carracci. The study also draws on an array of historical
sources - including sixteenth-century theories of portraiture,
prescriptive writings on women and the family, philosophical and
practical treatises on the home economy, sumptuary legislation,
books of secrets, prescriptive writings on old age, and household
inventories - to provide new historical perspectives on the
domestic life of the propertied classes in Bologna during the
period. Author Erin Campbell contends that these images of
unidentified women are not only crucial to our understanding of the
cultural operations of art within the early modern world, but also,
by working from the margins to revise the center, provide an
opportunity to present new conceptual frameworks and question our
assumptions about old age, portraiture, and the domestic interior.
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