The Mind's eye: art and theological argument in the Middle Ages
2006; Association of College and Research Libraries; Volume: 43; Issue: 09 Linguagem: Inglês
10.5860/choice.43-5067
ISSN1943-5975
AutoresJeffrey F. Hamburger, Anne-Marie Bouché,
Tópico(s)Byzantine Studies and History
ResumoIntroduction by Jeffrey F. Hamburger The Place of Theology in Medieval Art History: Problems, Positions, Possibilities by Jeffrey F. Hamburger Anthropology and the Use of Religious Images in the Opus Caroli Regis (Libri Carolini) by Karl F. Morrison Replica: Images of Identity and the Identity of Images in Prescholastic France by Brigitte Miriam Bedos-Rezak Is There a Theology of the Gothic Cathedral? A Re-reading of Abbot Suger's Writings on the Abbey Church of St.-Denis by Andreas Speer Christ and the Vision of God: The Biblical Diagrams of the Codex Amiatinus by Celia Chazelle Raban Maur, Bernard de Clairvaux, Bonaventure: expression de l'espace et topographie spirituelle dans les images medievales by Christian Heck Typology and Its Uses in the Moralized Bible by Christopher Hughes L'Exception corporelle: a propos de l'Assomption de Marie by Jean-Claude Schmitt Theologians as Trinitarian Iconographers by Bernard McGinn Seeing and Seeing Beyond: The Mass of St. Gregory in the Fifteenth Century by Caroline Walker Bynum Porous Subject Matter and Christ's Haunted Infancy by Alfred Acres Love's Arrows: Christ as Cupid in Late Medieval Art and Devotion by Barbara Newman Moving Images in the Mind's Eye by Marty Carruthers Vox Imaginis: Anomaly and Enigma in Romanesque Art by Anne-Marie Bouche Seeing as Action and Passion in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries by Katherine H. Tachau As far as the eye can see...: Rituals of Gazing in the Late Middle Ages by Thomas Lentes The Medieval Work of Art: Wherein the Work? Wherein the Art? by Jeffrey F. Hamburger Turning a Blind Eye: Medieval Art and the Dynamics of Contemplation by Herbert L. Kessler
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