03919nam 22006492 450 991079370800332120201211165458.01-64189-239-010.1515/9781641892391(CKB)4100000009184475(MiAaPQ)EBC5890932(DE-B1597)541612(OCoLC)1121654037(DE-B1597)9781641892391(UkCbUP)CR9781641892391(EXLCZ)99410000000918447520201011d2019|||| uy| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierFluid bodies and bodily fluids in premodern Europe bodies, blood, and tears in literature, theology, and art /edited by Anne M. Scott and Michael David Barbezat[electronic resource]New edition.Leeds :Arc Humanities Press,2019.1 online resource (viii, 203 pages) digital, PDF file(s)BorderlinesTitle from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 20 Nov 2020).1-64189-238-2 Introduction : bodies, fluidity, and change / Michael David Barbezat and Anne M. Scott -- part 1. Transformative and manipulative tears -- Where did Margery Kempe cry? / Anthony Bale -- Elusive tears : lamentation and impassivity in fifteenth- century passion iconography / Hugh Hudson -- Catherine's tears : diplomatic corporeality, affective performance, and gender at the sixteenth-century French court / Susan Broomhall -- part 2. Identities in blood -- Piers Plowman and the blood of brotherhood / Anne M. Scott -- Performative asceticism and exemplary effluvia : blood, tears, and rapture in fourteenth-century German Dominican literature / Samuel Baudinette -- "Bloody business:" passions and regulation of sanguinity in William Shakespeare's Macbeth and King Lear / Karin Sellberg -- part 3. Bodies and blood in life, death, and resurrection -- Saintly blood : absence, presence, and the alter Christus / Diana Hiller -- The treatment of the body in anatomy lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp / Helen Gramotnev -- Augustine on the flesh of the resurrection body in the De fide et symbolo : origen, Manichaeism, and Augustine's developing thought regarding human physical perfection / Michael David Barbezat.This interdisciplinary collection of essays, containing chapters from specialists in history, art history, medical history, and literature, examines how the intimately familiar language of the body served as a convenient medium through which to imagine and describe transformations of the larger world, both for the better and also for the worse. Its individual contributors demonstrate the myriad ways in which rethinking the human body was one way to approach rethinking the social, political, and religious realities of the world from the Middle Ages until the early modern period.Borderlines.Human bodySymbolic aspectsHuman body in literatureHistoryTo 1500Human figure in artHistoryTo 1500Human bodyReligious aspectsHistoryTo 1500Human body in literatureBlood.bodily humours.corporeality.devotion.emotions.tears.Human bodySymbolic aspects.Human body in literatureHistoryHuman figure in artHistoryHuman bodyReligious aspectsHistoryHuman body in literature.306.4Barbezat Michael D.Scott Anne M.UkCbUPUkCbUPBOOK9910793708003321Fluid bodies and bodily fluids in premodern Europe3701452UNINA