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Structures of Feeling in Seventeenth-Century Cultural Expression

Part of the UCLA Clark Memorial Library Series series
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Between the waning of the Renaissance and the beginning of the Enlightenment, many fundamental aspects of human behaviour - from expressions of gender to the experience of time - underwent radical changes.

While some of these transformations were recorded in words, others have survived in non-verbal cultural media, notably the visual arts, poetry, theatre, music, and dance.

Structures of Feeling in Seventeenth-Century Cultural Expression explores how artists made use of these various cultural forms to grapple with human values in the increasingly heterodox world of the 1600s. Essays from prominent historians, musicologists, and art critics examine methods of non-verbal cultural expression through the broad themes of time, motion, the body, and global relations.

Together, they show that seventeenth-century cultural expression was more than just an embryonic stage within Western artistic development.

Instead, the contributors argue that this period marks some of the most profound changes in European subjectivities.

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Product Details
University of Toronto Press
1442640626 / 9781442640627
Hardback
04/03/2013
Canada
English
400 pages, 20 halftones; 1 figure
159 x 236 mm, 720 grams