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Spaces of Knowledge in Medieval Diagrams

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The spatial structure of diagrams can be described in algebraic, geometric, cognitive or semiotic terms. Based on the Ur-diagram of the Divided Line in Plato s Republic , diagrams can be understood as representations of the visible and the intelligible world. However, the knowledge thus conveyed is subject to the contingency of material and contextual, i.e., period-specific circumstances. How is the spatial organization of diagrams in medieval manuscripts structured under such conditions? The examples dealt with in this essay range from diagrammaric glosses to the late antique Corpus Dionysiacum to visualizations of the powers of perception and cognition by the Renaissance scholar Charles Bovelles. Medieval spaces of knowledge encompassed not only the confines of libraries or the extended social networks within which books were written, exchanged, and read; they also took shape on the page, most persuasively in the form of diagrams.

About the author

Jeffrey F. Hamburger, born in 1957, is Kuno Francke Professor of German Art & Culture at Harvard University. He has published on medieval art, especially on illuminated manuscripts and on piety and mysticism. His research interests include text-image issues across various media, the history of diagrams and the art of female monasticism.

Summary

The spatial structure of diagrams can be described in algebraic, geometric, cognitive or semiotic terms. Based on the ʻUr-diagramʼ of the Divided Line in Platoʼs ʻRepublicʼ, diagrams can be understood as representations of the visible and the intelligible world. However, the knowledge thus conveyed is subject to the contingency of material and contextual, i.e., period-specific circumstances. How is the spatial organization of diagrams in medieval manuscripts structured under such conditions? The examples dealt with in this essay range from diagrammaric glosses to the late antique ʻCorpus Dionysiacumʼ to visualizations of the powers of perception and cognition by the Renaissance scholar Charles Bovelles. Medieval spaces of knowledge encompassed not only the confines of libraries or the extended social networks within which books were written, exchanged, and read; they also took shape on the page, most persuasively in the form of diagrams.

Foreword

Diagrams in European art and culture

Product details

Authors Jeffrey F Hamburger, Jeffrey F. Hamburger
Publisher Schwabe Verlag Basel
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 24.11.2025
 
EAN 9783796554117
ISBN 978-3-7965-5411-7
No. of pages 68
Dimensions 150 mm x 8 mm x 212 mm
Weight 131 g
Illustrations 1 SW-Abb., 19 Farbabb., 1 Tabellen
Series Randgänge der Mediävistik
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Humanities (general)

Antike, Sozial- und Kulturgeschichte, Europäische Geschichte, cognitive categories, Corpus Dionysiacum, semiotic categories, algebraic categories, manuscript illustration, Charles Bovelles, geometric categories, spatial organization, Divided Line, deus artifex

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