Brepols Online Books Medieval Monographs Collection 2019 - bob2019mome
Collection Contents
2 results
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Il calamo dell'esistenza
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:Il calamo dell'esistenza show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: Il calamo dell'esistenzaAuthors: Patrizia Spallino and Ivana PanzecaUno degli esempi più significativi dei frutti prodotti dal confronto aperto tra un sufi ed un filosofo è la corrispondenza tenutasi nel XIII secolo tra Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Qūnawī (m. 1274) e Nasīr al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī (m. 1274), il primo discepolo diretto e figlio adottivo dello šayḫ al-akbar Ibn al-‘Arabī, il secondo seguace e commentatore di Avicenna. Soggetto centrale del dibattito è l’analisi dell’essere in tutte le sue molteplici determinazioni e manifestazioni: la realtà di Dio, l’essere generale e comune, la sostanza e la materia, l’unità e la molteplicità, la natura dell’anima, del corpo, delle forze celesti, il dolore e la gioia spirituale, l’emanazione, il finito e l’infinito. Tutti i quesiti si sviluppano su uno scenario in cui si prendono in considerazione gli estremi limiti del pensiero teoretico che guarda e si interroga sulla sfera contemplativa della luce rivelativa; una dialettica serrata nel tentativo di armonizzare due dimensioni all’apparenza inconciliabili ma in realtà complementari.
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The Image of the City in Early Netherlandish Painting (1400-1550)
show More to view fulltext, buy and share links for:The Image of the City in Early Netherlandish Painting (1400-1550) show Less to hide fulltext, buy and share links for: The Image of the City in Early Netherlandish Painting (1400-1550)By: Jelle De RockPainted cityscapes have always captivated the viewers of medieval works of art. To this day scholars are mesmerised by their capacity to mirror the urban context from which they sprang, combined with their ability to symbolize a more abstract world view, religious idea or social ideal. Especially oil painting, which thrived in the fifteenth-century Low Countries among a heterogeneous elite and the well-off urban middling groups, succeeded as no other medium in capturing the urban landscape in its finest details. In order to gain an insight into how late medieval citizens, clerics and noblemen conceived of urban society and space, this book combines a serial analysis of a large corpus of painted city views with a critical discussion of some well-documented and revealing works of art. Throughout the book a variety of questions are addressed, ranging from the religious conception of the city, the theatrical dimension of urban space, the extent to which Early Netherlandish painting depicted the city as an economic space, how images of city and countryside functioned as identity markers of the donor, and how technical advances in the field of cartography impacted the portrayal of towns in the sixteenth century. In doing so, this study explores the duality of some of the major interpretive schemes that have determined the last few decades of historiography on late medieval Netherlandish culture, oscillating between bourgeois and courtly, realistic and symbolic, profane and religious, and innovative versus traditional.
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