Windows of the Soul: Physiognomy in European Culture 1470-1780In late fifteenth century Florence, Renaissance humanists rediscovered a secret, natural language hidden in the visual wisdom of the proverb 'the eyes are the windows of the soul'. Through its magical prism, the language of eyes, faces, voices, laughs, walks, even stones, plants and animals, all became windows into the souls of other people, of oneself, of nature, and ultimately of God. Some saw in its words the perfect hieroglyphic language by which Adam had first named nature, which, when combined with the art of memory, could bring about a form of 'inner writing' or mystical self-transformation. Yet many others dismissed it as a collection of arbitrary conventions, superstitious enigmas, or 'gypsy' riddles. Embroiled in the religious persecution of the Reformation, rejected as a science during the Scientific Revolution, in the age of Enlightenment physiognomy came to be seen as nothing more than an amusing entertainment. But with the dawn of Romanticism, be it in the realms of science, religion, or poetry, some began to see that physiognomy was no game and the flame of serious interest in physiognomy was once again rekindled. Combining book history and visual history, Dr Porter reconstructs this physiognomical eye, interprets the way in which books on physiognomy were read and traces the wider intellectual, social, and cultural changes that contributed to the metamorphosis of this way of beholding oneself and the natural world from the Renaissance to the dawn of Romanticism. |
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Table des matières
Introduction | 1 |
1 A Persistent Fisnomical Consciousness c400 BCEc1470 CE | 46 |
2 The Bookish Face of Physiognomy in Early Modern Europe | 79 |
3 The Troubling Emergence of the Egyptian in Early Modern Europe | 120 |
4 The Physiognomy Captured and Lost in a Book | 172 |
5 Physiognomating by the Book | 207 |
6 Living Graffiti | 255 |
Conclusion | 301 |
Bibliography | 326 |
347 | |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Windows of the Soul: Physiognomy in European Culture 1470-1780 Martin Henry Porter,VP for Operations Management Martin Porter Aucun aperçu disponible - 2005 |
Windows of the Soul: Physiognomy in European Culture 1470-1780 Martin Henry Porter,VP for Operations Management Martin Porter Aucun aperçu disponible - 2005 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
ancient appears Arabic Arcandam Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle’s art of physiognomy astrological Bodleian Library body books on physiognomy Bruno Cambridge century chiromancy Didier Nicole divine early modern Europe early modern period edition Egyptian eighteenth-century English evidence example exposition of physiognomical face fact famous Ficino fisnomy Gaurico Giordano Bruno graffiti gypsies hermetic hermeticism human Indagine intellectual iognomy Jeake’s Johannes Kalendar language of physiognomy late Latin man’s manuscript Marsilio Ficino medieval Metoposcopie Michael Scot mirror Municipale de Lyon mystical natural magic natural philosopher natural philosophy Neoplatonic nomical nomy notion occult one’s Oxford Paracelsus Paris philosophical Photo phys physiog physiognomical aphorisms physiognomical doctrine physiognomical eye physiognomical treatises Porta printed pseudo-Aristotelian reader reading Renaissance Robert Fludd Samuel Jeake Saunders scientific Scot’s Secretum Secretum secretorum sense seventeenth-century sixteenth-century soul suggests textual things tion treatise on physiognomy underlined understanding visual vols Warburg Institute whilst words