
Visualizing the Text
From Manuscript Culture to the Age of Caricature
University of Delaware Press
Published on 1. June 2017
Book
Hardback
382 pages
978-1-61149-645-1 (ISBN)
Description
This volume presents in-depth and contextualized analyses of a wealth of visual materials. These documents provide viewers with a mesmerizing and informative glimpse into how the early modern world was interpreted by image-makers and presented to viewers during a period that spans from manuscript culture to the age of caricature. The premise of this collection responds to a fundamental question: how are early modern texts, objects, and systems of knowledge imaged and consumed through bimodal, hybrid, or intermedial products that rely on both words and pictures to convey meaning? The twelve contributors to this collection go beyond traditional lines of inquiry into word-and-image interaction to deconstruct visual dynamics and politics-to show how images were shaped, manipulated, displayed, and distributed to represent the material world, to propagate official and commercial messages, to support religious practice and ideology, or to embody relations of power. These chapters are anchored in various theoretical and disciplinary points of departure, such as the history of collections and collecting, literary theory and criticism, the histories of science, art history and visual culture, word-and-image studies, as well as print culture and book illustration. Authors draw upon a wide range of visual material hitherto insufficiently explored and placed in context, in some cases hidden in museums and archives, or previously assessed only from a disciplinary standpoint that favored either the image or the text but not both in relation to each other. They include manuscript illuminations representing compilers and collections, frontispieces and other accompanying plates published in catalogues and museographies, astronomical diagrams, mixed pictographic-alphabetic accounting documents, Spanish baroque paintings, illustrative frontispieces or series inspired by or designed for single novels or anthologies, anatomical drawings featured in encyclopedic publications, visual patterns of volcanic formations, engravings representing the New World that accompany non-fictional travelogues, commonplace books that interlace text and images, and graphic satire. Geographically, the collection covers imperial centers (Great Britain, France, the Netherlands, and Spain), as well as their colonial periphery (New France; Mexico; Central America; South America, in particular Brazil; parts of Africa; and the island of Ceylon). Emblematic and thought-provoking, these images are only fragments of the multifaceted and comprehensive visual mosaic created during the early modern period, but their consideration has far reaching implications.
Reviews / Votes
An impressive body of seminal scholarship, "Visualizing the Text: From Manuscript Culture to the Age of Caricature" is a truly exceptional collection of twelve insightfully informative, thoughtful and thought-provoking articles, and features illustrations, an informative introduction by Christina Ionescu, and a ten page index. "Visualizing the Text" is an unreservedly recommended and critically analytic contribution to college and university library Contemporary Literary Studies collections in general, and Visual Culture supplemental studies reading lists in particular. * Midwest Book Review *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
14 Halftones, color; 44 Halftones, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 159 mm
Thickness: 29 mm
Weight
762 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-61149-645-1 (9781611496451)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Christina Ionescu is associate professor of French studies at Mount Allison University.
Lauren Beck is associate professor of Hispanic studies at Mount Allison University.
Lauren Beck is associate professor of Hispanic studies at Mount Allison University.
Content
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Visualizing the Text from Manuscript Culture to the Age of Caricature:
A Theoretical, Methodological, and Conceptual Framework
Christina Ionescu
Part I: Representing Space: Book Culture, Visual Perspectivism, and Intercultural Communication
Chapter 1: Compiling Creation: Medieval Codicology and Images of Early Modern Collection by Janine Rogers
Chapter 2: Cosmography and Perspectivism: Alonso de Fuentes's Summa de philosophia natural, Its Illustrations, and Cervantes's Don Quixote by Rachel Schmidt
Chapter 3: The Development of Mixed Pictographic-Alphabetic Accounting Documents in Colonial Mexico by Cecilia Brain
Part II: Annotating the Image: Baroque Painting, News Maps, and Print Captions
Chapter 4: Annotation and Books in Early Modern Spanish Painting by Lauren Beck
Chapter 5: Visualizing the News: The Amsterdam Spin-Doctor Claes Jansz Visscher and the West India Company by Michiel van Groesen
Chapter 6: Text on Image on Text: Picturing "Nature" in Schall's Illustrations for Rousseau's Julie, ou La Nouvelle Heloise by Ann Lewis
Part III: Imagining Empirical Knowledge: Illustrated Travelogues, Natural History Treatises, and Geological Texts
Chapter 7 : Description and Representation in Oviedo's and Staden's Travel Accounts of the New World by Sandra Saenz-Lopez Perez
Chapter 8: Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton's Anatomic Descriptions Complemented by Jacques de Seve's Drawings: The Hidden Scientific Gem of Buffon's Histoire Naturelle by Swann Paradis
Chapter 9: From Analogies to Patterns: Images in French and British Geological Texts (1760-1800) by David McCallam
Part IV: Illustrating the Text: Engraved Exotica, Traces of Reading, and Satirical Books
Chapter 10: Dialectic of/on Foreignness: Textual and Iconographic Representations of the Faraway in the Histoire Generale des Voyages by Abbe Prevost by Antoine Eche
Chapter 11: Illustrating for Posterity: Modes of Readership in the Eighteenth-Century Literary Marketplace by Leigh G. Dillard
Chapter 12: "Caricature Untrammelled": Thomas Tegg's Illustrated Satirical Books by Christina Smylitopoulos
About the Contributors
Index
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Visualizing the Text from Manuscript Culture to the Age of Caricature:
A Theoretical, Methodological, and Conceptual Framework
Christina Ionescu
Part I: Representing Space: Book Culture, Visual Perspectivism, and Intercultural Communication
Chapter 1: Compiling Creation: Medieval Codicology and Images of Early Modern Collection by Janine Rogers
Chapter 2: Cosmography and Perspectivism: Alonso de Fuentes's Summa de philosophia natural, Its Illustrations, and Cervantes's Don Quixote by Rachel Schmidt
Chapter 3: The Development of Mixed Pictographic-Alphabetic Accounting Documents in Colonial Mexico by Cecilia Brain
Part II: Annotating the Image: Baroque Painting, News Maps, and Print Captions
Chapter 4: Annotation and Books in Early Modern Spanish Painting by Lauren Beck
Chapter 5: Visualizing the News: The Amsterdam Spin-Doctor Claes Jansz Visscher and the West India Company by Michiel van Groesen
Chapter 6: Text on Image on Text: Picturing "Nature" in Schall's Illustrations for Rousseau's Julie, ou La Nouvelle Heloise by Ann Lewis
Part III: Imagining Empirical Knowledge: Illustrated Travelogues, Natural History Treatises, and Geological Texts
Chapter 7 : Description and Representation in Oviedo's and Staden's Travel Accounts of the New World by Sandra Saenz-Lopez Perez
Chapter 8: Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton's Anatomic Descriptions Complemented by Jacques de Seve's Drawings: The Hidden Scientific Gem of Buffon's Histoire Naturelle by Swann Paradis
Chapter 9: From Analogies to Patterns: Images in French and British Geological Texts (1760-1800) by David McCallam
Part IV: Illustrating the Text: Engraved Exotica, Traces of Reading, and Satirical Books
Chapter 10: Dialectic of/on Foreignness: Textual and Iconographic Representations of the Faraway in the Histoire Generale des Voyages by Abbe Prevost by Antoine Eche
Chapter 11: Illustrating for Posterity: Modes of Readership in the Eighteenth-Century Literary Marketplace by Leigh G. Dillard
Chapter 12: "Caricature Untrammelled": Thomas Tegg's Illustrated Satirical Books by Christina Smylitopoulos
About the Contributors
Index