![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
The present volume tries to do justice to the variety of self-representational strategies in the art and literature of the late medieval and early modern period by focusing on both the traditional con texts of self-definition (such as courts, schools and religious institutions) and the more innovative contexts of humanist art and literature. The essays collected in this volume represent some of the scholarly approaches to historical testimonies of self-representation and self-fashioning, and hence deal with the literary, artistic, philosophical and theological conceptions of the self. They are preceded by a more general essay indexing the ways in which self-representational texts, ego-documents and self-testimonies should be defined.
The compass of the volume extends both to single-leaf broadsides from letter-presses and printed forms produced in the 15th and early 16th centuries. The perspectives on this new textual and pictorial medium presented in the 16 articles range from literary studies, history of book-printing and communication, history and art history to research on incunabula. The result is a rich panoply of insights on single-leaf broadsides as testimonies of change and continuity in social communication during the transition to the modern age.
Die Familie der Furstin beschreibt das Wirken Marias von Sachsen (1515-1583) als Herzogin von Pommern im Kreis ihrer Kernfamilie hinsichtlich der Erziehung ihrer Kinder, des Aufbaus der ersten nachgewiesenen pommerschen Hofbibliothek und des weitgespannten Netzwerks von Korrespondenzen. Bezogen auf die Bereiche Erziehung, Bucher und Briefe werden die Handlungsspielraume einer bisher kaum wahrgenommenen Furstin im Reformationszeitalter in ihrem Wirken fur ihre Familie transparent. Dabei arbeitet Doerthe Buchhester unter anderem die Moeglichkeiten eigenhandiger weiblicher Korrespondenz unter Anwendung der Systemtheorie von Niklas Luhmann heraus.
Historical interest is rooted in a quest for identity. The histories of tribes, communities and nations help to define their selfhood, and hence their pasts are inevitably modelled on an implicit program stating the use that an author, a ruler or a community wants to make of real or imagined history. History thus becomes a malleable concept accommodating the requirements of self-definition of individuals, or of social and ethnic groups. It also furnishes the fictional props of the ideologies of states and nascent states that are in need of national mythologies to boost their self-esteem. Under the general title Building the Past the various ends and purposes of historical reconstruction and invention in the late medieval and early modern period are examined in this volume by scholars from various specialised fields. Their contributions are grouped in two sections, Rediscovery of the Past and Construction of National Myths.
Fore mote than three decades the problem of the transition from medieval to early modern time has been an important issue of debate for various disciplines within cultural history. The essays in this collection will explore the historical developments in these epochs, focusing on the relation between tradition and innovation on three levels: (1) perceptions of the world and changing geographical boundaries; (2) literary activity in the social environment of towns and humanist circles; and (3) new modes of interpretation and representation in intellectual history.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Allergy Sense For Families - A Practical…
Meg Faure, Sarah Karabus, …
Paperback
1 Recce: Volume 3 - Onsigbaarheid Is Ons…
Alexander Strachan
Paperback
|