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Temporality and Mediality in Late Medieval and Early Modern Culture

✍ Scribed by Christian Kiening, Martina Stercken


Publisher
Brepols Publishers
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
268
Series
Cursor Mundi, 32
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This interdisciplinary volume explores the ways in which time is staged at the threshold between the Middle Ages and the early modern period. Proceeding from the reality that all cultural forms are inherently and inescapably temporal, it seeks to discover the significance of time in mediations and communications of all kinds.

By showing how time is displayed in diverse cultural strategies and situations, the essays of this volume show how time is intrinsic to the very concept of tradition. In exploring a variety of medial forms and communicative practices, they also reveal that while the beginning of the age of printing (around 1500) may mark a fundamental change in terms of reproduction and circulation, artefacts and other historical traditions continue to employ earlier systems and practices relating time and space.

The volume features articles by leading researchers in their respective fields, including studies on mosaics as a medium reflecting space and time; the triptych’s potential as a time machine; winged altarpieces mediating eternity; texts and images of the passion of Christ permeating past, present, and future; dimensions of time embedded in maps; a compendium of world knowledge organized by forms of time and temporality; the figuration of prophecy in times of crisis; the portrayal of time in architecture.

The volume thus provides a new approach to media and mediality from the perspective of cultural history.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter ("Contents", "List of Illustrations"), p. i

Free Access

Introduction, p. 1
Christian Kiening, Martina Stercken
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114019

Temporality versus Transcendence: Mosaic as a Medium beyond Perspective, p. 15
Barbara Schellewald
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114020

The Triptych and its Time Folds: Artistic Explorations around 1500, p. 41
Marius Rimmele
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114021

Presence as Display: Carved Altarpieces on the Threshold to Eternity, p. 75
Britta DΓΌmpelmann
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114022

Mediating the Passion in Time and Space, p. 115
Christian Kiening
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114023

Mapping Time at the Threshold of Modernity, p. 147
Martina Stercken
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114024

Vide infra […] vide supra: Flipping through Times in the Rudimentum Novitiorum (1475), p. 177
Anja Rathmann-Lutz
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114025

Precarious Times: The Discourse of the Prophet in the Age of Reformation, p. 197
Marcus Sandl
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114026

Lingering: Visions of Past and Future in the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, p. 229
Aleksandra Prica
https://doi.org/10.1484/M.CURSOR-EB.5.114027

Back Matter, p. 255


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