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Blindness: the history of a mental image in Western thought


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Abstract

"Blindness is a remarkable study of how Western culture has imagined what it is like to be blind, especially as it is represented in that most visual of arts, painting. Art historian Moshe Barasch here draws upon not only the span of art history from antiquity to the eighteenth century but also the classical and biblical traditions that underpin so much of artistic representation: Blind Homer, the healing of the blind, blind musicians, blindness as a punishment, blindness as a special mark. The book discusses blindness in antiquity, in the Early Christian world, in the Middle Ages, and in the Renaissance, with a final long consideration of Diderot. Blindness explores the fascinating paradoxes in the Western representation of blindness, revealing the ways in which the idea of absence of vision has been central in the history of our visual culture"-- Provided by publisher.

Contents

Antiquity -- Attitudes of the Bible -- Classical Antiquity: Causes of Blindness -- Blindness and Guilt -- The Blind Seer -- Ate -- Visual Representations -- The Blind in the Early Christian World -- The Healing of the Blind -- Blindness and Revelation: The Story of Paul -- The Middle Ages -- The Antichrist -- Allegorical Blindness -- The Blind Beggar -- The Blind and His Guide -- The Renaissance and Its Sequel -- The Blind Beggar -- Metaphorical Blindness -- The Revival of the Blind Seer -- Early Secularizations of the Blind -- The Disenchantment of Blindness: Diderot's Lettre sur les aveugles.

Publisher

  • Publication

    New York: Routledge, 2001

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Type

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Classification

  • ISBN

    • 0415927439
    • 9780415927420
    • 0415927420
    • 9780415927437

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