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The diagram as paradigm : cross-cultural approaches / edited by Jeffrey F. Hamburger, David J. Roxburgh, and Linda Safran.

Fine Arts Library ND3320 .D53 2022
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Hamburger, Jeffrey F., 1957- editor.
Roxburgh, David J., editor.
Safran, Linda, editor.
Dumbarton Oaks, host institution.
Series:
Dumbarton Oaks Byzantine symposia and colloquia
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Charts, diagrams, etc--Byzantine Empire--History--To 1500--Congresses.
Charts, diagrams, etc.
Charts, diagrams, etc--Islamic countries--History--To 1500--Congresses.
Charts, diagrams, etc--Europe--History--To 1500--Congresses.
Charts, diagrams, etc--Cross-cultural studies--Congresses.
Illumination of books and manuscripts, Byzantine--Congresses.
Illumination of books and manuscripts, Byzantine.
Islamic illumination of books and manuscripts--Congresses.
Islamic illumination of books and manuscripts.
Visual communication--History--To 1500--Congresses.
Visual communication.
Byzantine Empire.
Europe.
Islamic countries.
Genre:
History.
Conference papers and proceedings.
Physical Description:
563 pages : illustrations, color facsimiles ; 29 cm
Place of Publication:
Washington, DC : Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, [2022]
Summary:
"This is the first book that looks at medieval diagrams in a cross-cultural perspective, focusing on three regions - Byzantium, the Islamicate world, and the Latin West - each culturally diverse and each closely linked to the others through complex processes of intellectual, artistic, diplomatic, and mercantile exchange. The volume unites case studies, often of little-known material, by an international set of specialists, and is prefaced by four introductory essays that provide broad overviews of diagrammatic traditions in these regions in addition to considering the theoretical dimensions of diagramming. Among the historical disciplines whose use of diagrams is explored are philosophy, theology, mysticism, music, medicine, mathematics, astronomy, and cosmology. Despite the sheer variety, ingenuity, and visual inventiveness of diagrams from the premodern world, in conception and practical use they often share many similarities, both in construction and application. Diagrams prove to be an essential part of the fabric of premodern intellectual, scientific, religious, artistic, and artisanal life"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
General introduction: Medieval diagrams / Jeffrey F. Hamburger
Overviews: Byzantine diagrams / Linda Safran
Islamicate diagrams / David J. Roxburgh
Western medieval diagrams / Jeffrey F. Hamburger
Scientific diagrams: Between diagram and image: on Yuval's harp / Benjamin Anderson
Byzantine-Islamic scientific culture in the astronomical diagrams of Chioniades on John of Damascus / Alexandre M. Roberts
Space, place, diagram: Cleomedes and the visual program of Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Cod.gr. 482 / Divna Manolova
Al-Ṣūfī's Kitāb ṣuwar al-kawākib al-thābita (Book of forms of the fixed stars): between illustrated book, scientific instrument, and firmament / David J. Roxburgh
Cosmological diagrams: A world of embedded spheres: circular planetary diagrams in late Byzantine manuscripts / Anne-Laurence Caudano
Islamic cosmological diagrams / Sonja Brentjes
Corporeal and spiritual celestial spheres and their visual figurations: from Abelard of Bath and Honorius to John of Sacrobosco and Michael Scot / Barbara Obrist
Medical diagrams: Diagrams in Greek medical manuscripts / Petros Bouras-Vallianatos
Proven recipes: geometry and the art of Arabic medicine / Meekyung Macmurdie
Utility beyond function: practical and social uses of diagrams in late medieval English medical manuscripts / Sara Öberg Strådal
Mathematical, philosophical, and theological diagrams: Grid space in Boethius's De institutione arithmetica / Megan C. McNamee
Drawing conclusions: logic diagrams as a matrix for the making and meaning of Christian images in the Middle Ages / Jeffrey H. Hamburger
Zweifalten's diagrammatic Scriptorium / Adam S. Cohen
Diagramming Byzantine orthodoxy / Linda Safran
The Prophet Muḥammad's ʹAyn seal: a Safavid-period diagram as cosmic vision / Christiane Gruber.
Notes:
Chiefly papers presented at a conference held April 20-21, 2018, at Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, DC.
"Long discredited as inadequate illustrations of thought processes more appropriately represented in algebraic or verbal terms, diagrams have enjoyed a renaissance across numerous disciplines--from philosophy and computer science to the burgeoning field of graphics--as a means of visualizing knowledge. As the historical disciplines take a fresh look at diagrams, this symposium will seek to offer an interdisciplinary, comparative, and cross-cultural perspective, considering the range of diagrams in Byzantium, Europe, and the Islamicate world. Its cross-cultural approach aims to decenter the bodies of scholarly work that focus on only one of these three traditions, within which it remains all too easy to take particular uses of diagrams for granted. Among the questions [the] symposium will pose are: Why are diagrams relatively sparse (and certainly understudied) in the Byzantine and Islamic worlds? Why are they rarely adopted as vehicles of religious thought? What role do diagrams play in the development and documentation of scientific thought across the three traditions? How does the diagrammatic mode relate to artistic practice? To cartography? To science? To literature? To the school curriculum? Why is so much of 'Western' medieval art diagrammatic in character, but so little of Byzantine and Islamic art? How do attitudes toward diagrams change over time? And how do the three traditions interact with one another?"--Dumbarton Oaks Byzantine Studies event email dated February 13, 2018.
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
ISBN:
9780884024866
0884024865
OCLC:
1305501390
Publisher Number:
17616907

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