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E-grāmata: Space and Self in Early Modern European Cultures

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Space and Self thus sets the terms for current discussion of these topics and provides new approaches to studying their cultural specificity.



The notion of ‘selfhood’ conjures up images of self-sufficiency, integrity, introspectiveness, and autonomy – characteristics typically associated with ‘modernity.’ The seventeenth century marks the crucial transition to a new form of ‘bourgeois’ selfhood, although the concept goes back to the pre-modern and early modern period. A richly interdisciplinary collection, Space and Self integrates perspectives from history, history of literature, and history of art to link the issue of selfhood to the new and vital literature on space.

As Space and Self shows, there have at all times been multiple paths and alternative possibilities for forming identities, marking personhood, and experiencing life as a concrete, singular individual. Positioning self and space as specific and evolving constructs, a diverse group of contributors explore how persons become embodied in particular places or inscribed in concrete space. Space and Self thus sets the terms for current discussion of these topics and provides new approaches to studying their cultural specificity.

Recenzijas

Historians are invited to try out and test the fascinating questions raised in this volume. Scholars will benefit from a range of insights to be gleaned from this rich collection.

- Giora Sternberg (The Journal of Modern History vol 87:03:2015)

List of Figures
xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 3(14)
David Warren Sabean
Malina Stefanovska
PART I HABITAT AND HABITUS
1 At the Study: Notes on the Production of the Scholarly Self
17(34)
Gadi Algazi
2 From Pictor Philosophus to Homo Oeconomicus: Renegotiating Social Space in Poussin's Self-Portrait of 1649-1650
51(17)
David Packwood
3 The Scholar at Work: Habitus and the Identity of the `Learned' in Eighteenth-Century France
68(28)
Anne C. Vila
4 The Eccentric Centre: Selfhood and Sociability at the Heart of England's Culture of Enlightenment Print
96(16)
David S. Shields
5 Theatrical Identities and Political Allegories: Fashioning Subjects through Drama in the Household of Cardinal Richelieu (1635-1643)
112(22)
Deborah Blocker
6 Noble Selfhood and the Nature Poetry of Saint-Amant
134(19)
Michael Taormina
PART II PLOTTING THE BODY: TRAJECTORIES AND PROJECTIONS
7 Divine Grace, the Humoral Body, and the `Inner Self' in Seventeenth-Century France and England
153(12)
Robert Dimit
8 Nicole and Hobbes: Materiality, Motion, and the Passions
165(18)
Erec R. Koch
9 Loci Theologici: Authority, the Fall, and the Theology of the Puritan Self
183(17)
Frederic Gabriel
10 Exile in the Reformation
200(19)
Lee Palmer Wandel
11 Spaces of Dreaming: Self-Constitution in Early Modern Dream Narratives
219(20)
Andreas Bahr
12 Cartography and the Melancholic Self
239(19)
Christopher Wild
13 Ingenieurs du Roy, Ingenieur du Moy: Self and Space in Montaigne and Descartes
258(23)
Tom Conley
PART III NEW DIMENSIONS: INTERSTICES AND INTENSITIES
14 A Taste for the Interstitial: Translating Space from Beijing to London in the 1720s
281(24)
Robert Batchelor
15 Sculpted by Dead Marbles: Winckelmann's `Outer Selves' and the Body without Organs
305(16)
Jean-Philippe Antoine
Contributors 321(6)
Index 327
David Sabean is the Henry J. Bruman Endowed Professor of German History at the University of California at Los Angeles.

Malina Stefanovska is a Professor of French and Francophone Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.