Getting started with the collection:
No image available
Speaking to the eye: sight and insight through text and image (1150-1650)
Abstract
This volume takes as its focus the paradoxical double-bind of textuality and visuality in the culture of the high and late Middle Ages and early modernity. In a series of case studies contributors explore the historical and theoretical implications of the idea that texts and images alike 'speak to the eye.' Some scholars have proclaimed the coming of a 'visual turn' to explain the boom in conferences, books, and even specialized journals that take as their topic the theoretical or historical study of visual culture. The notion of visual culture may seem self-evident, not merely from our own twenty-first-century perspective but also when applied to earlier periods of western European history. However, the nature and status of the visual media, as well as the ways in which these were received, experienced, and appropriated, underwent several major changes between the twelfth and the seventeenth centuries.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
Turnhout: Brepols, ©2013
Is about
Subject
Period
1150-1650
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9782503534206
- 2503534201
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL: