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Typology and Iconography in Donne, H...
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Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton :Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah /
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton :Reuben Sa��nchez.
其他題名:
Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah /
作者:
Sa��nchez, Reuben,
面頁冊數:
1 online resource (x, 275 pages.)
標題:
Art and literatureHistory17th century.England
電子資源:
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137397805
ISBN:
1137397802 (electronic bk.)
Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton :Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah /
Sa��nchez, Reuben,
Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton :
Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah /Reuben Sa��nchez. - 1 online resource (x, 275 pages.)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. 'The Sad Prophet Jeremiah' as an Image of Renaissance Melancholy -- PART I: REMBRANDT'S JEREMIAH: DONNE AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PREACHER -- 2. 'I turn my back to thee, but to receive corrections': Donne and the Art of Convetere in "The Lamentations of Jeremy, for the most part according to Tremelius", and 'Good Friday, 1613 Riding Westward' -- 3. 'First the "Burden", and then the "Ease"': Donne and the Art of Convetere in the Sermon on Lamentations 3:1 and in the Letter to His Mother -- PART II: SLUTER'S JEREMIAH: HERBERT AND LEARNING HOW TO VISUALIZE THE HEART -- 4. 'My heart hath store, write there': Writing on the Heart in Herbert's "The Temple" -- 5. 'Then was my heart broken, as was my verse': Visualizing the Heart in "The Temple" -- PART III: MICHELANGELO'S JEREMIAH: MILTON AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PROPHET -- 6. 'With new acquist / Of true experience': The Failed Revolutionary in the Letter to Heimbach and "Samson Agonistes" -- 7. 'And had none to cry to, but with the Prophet," O earth, earth, earth!"': Style, Witnessing, and Mythmaking in "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 8. 'As a burning fire shut up in my bones': From Polemic to Prophecy in The Reason of Church Government and "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 9. 'Unapocryphall vision': Jeremiah as Exemplary Model for Donne, Herbert, and Milton -- Appendix A: Renaissance Angels and Other Melancholy Figures -- Appendix B: Renaissance Images of Jeremiah -- Appendix C: Renaissance Melancholy and Modern Theory.
Seventeenth-century authors so thoroughly imbued the language and imagery of the Bible in vernacular translation that their texts are to be read as attempts to inscribe themselves within the realm of the sacred. I analyze how three seventeenth-century English authors fashion themselves as a specific biblical figure, and how they fashion themselves in their works in order to bring their spiritual lives in line with the narrative arch of a biblical type. In this biblical guise Donne, Herbert, and Milton each hopes to move God to his circumstances as He responded in biblical times to the original type; each author also hopes to move the reader to act to reform himself and thereby avoid the fate of the biblical Israelites. By engaging the art of the period I isolate and describe Donne's, Herbert's, and Milton's self-fashioning as the melancholic Jeremiah. Through a consideration of certain paintings, sculptures, and emblems, I present literature in a broader cultural context, thereby employing an interdisciplinary approach. There are several different Renaissance images of Jeremiah I discuss to give the reader an idea of the iconographic tradition which develops around this biblical figure, but I focus on three images in particular: Claus Sluter's sculpture, the Well of Moses (1404), Rembrandt's painting, 'The Prophet Jeremiah Mourning over the Destruction of Jerusalem' (1630), and Michelangelo's fresco of Jeremiah on the Sistine Chapel (1508-1512). I present detailed analyses of these three works in order to show how and why each of the three English authors fashions himself after one of these three images, or types, of Jeremiah: Donne after Rembrandt's Jeremiah, Herbert after Sluter's Jeremiah, and Milton after Michelangelo's Jeremiah.
ISBN: 1137397802 (electronic bk.)
Source: 717493Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Uniform Titles:
Bible
--In literature.Subjects--Topical Terms:
688594
Art and literature
--History--England--17th century.Index Terms--Genre/Form:
214472
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: PR428.C48 / S36 2014
Dewey Class. No.: 820.9/3823
Typology and Iconography in Donne, Herbert, and Milton :Fashioning the Self after Jeremiah /
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1. 'The Sad Prophet Jeremiah' as an Image of Renaissance Melancholy -- PART I: REMBRANDT'S JEREMIAH: DONNE AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PREACHER -- 2. 'I turn my back to thee, but to receive corrections': Donne and the Art of Convetere in "The Lamentations of Jeremy, for the most part according to Tremelius", and 'Good Friday, 1613 Riding Westward' -- 3. 'First the "Burden", and then the "Ease"': Donne and the Art of Convetere in the Sermon on Lamentations 3:1 and in the Letter to His Mother -- PART II: SLUTER'S JEREMIAH: HERBERT AND LEARNING HOW TO VISUALIZE THE HEART -- 4. 'My heart hath store, write there': Writing on the Heart in Herbert's "The Temple" -- 5. 'Then was my heart broken, as was my verse': Visualizing the Heart in "The Temple" -- PART III: MICHELANGELO'S JEREMIAH: MILTON AND LEARNING HOW TO BE A PROPHET -- 6. 'With new acquist / Of true experience': The Failed Revolutionary in the Letter to Heimbach and "Samson Agonistes" -- 7. 'And had none to cry to, but with the Prophet," O earth, earth, earth!"': Style, Witnessing, and Mythmaking in "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 8. 'As a burning fire shut up in my bones': From Polemic to Prophecy in The Reason of Church Government and "The Readie and Easie Way" -- 9. 'Unapocryphall vision': Jeremiah as Exemplary Model for Donne, Herbert, and Milton -- Appendix A: Renaissance Angels and Other Melancholy Figures -- Appendix B: Renaissance Images of Jeremiah -- Appendix C: Renaissance Melancholy and Modern Theory.
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Seventeenth-century authors so thoroughly imbued the language and imagery of the Bible in vernacular translation that their texts are to be read as attempts to inscribe themselves within the realm of the sacred. I analyze how three seventeenth-century English authors fashion themselves as a specific biblical figure, and how they fashion themselves in their works in order to bring their spiritual lives in line with the narrative arch of a biblical type. In this biblical guise Donne, Herbert, and Milton each hopes to move God to his circumstances as He responded in biblical times to the original type; each author also hopes to move the reader to act to reform himself and thereby avoid the fate of the biblical Israelites. By engaging the art of the period I isolate and describe Donne's, Herbert's, and Milton's self-fashioning as the melancholic Jeremiah. Through a consideration of certain paintings, sculptures, and emblems, I present literature in a broader cultural context, thereby employing an interdisciplinary approach. There are several different Renaissance images of Jeremiah I discuss to give the reader an idea of the iconographic tradition which develops around this biblical figure, but I focus on three images in particular: Claus Sluter's sculpture, the Well of Moses (1404), Rembrandt's painting, 'The Prophet Jeremiah Mourning over the Destruction of Jerusalem' (1630), and Michelangelo's fresco of Jeremiah on the Sistine Chapel (1508-1512). I present detailed analyses of these three works in order to show how and why each of the three English authors fashions himself after one of these three images, or types, of Jeremiah: Donne after Rembrandt's Jeremiah, Herbert after Sluter's Jeremiah, and Milton after Michelangelo's Jeremiah.
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