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OverviewPremodern architecture and built environments were fluid spaces whose configurations and meanings were constantly adapting and changing. The production of transitory meaning transpired whenever a body or object moved through these dynamic spaces. Whether spanning the short duration of a procession or the centuries of a building’s longue durée, a body or object in motion created in-the-moment narratives that unfolded through time and space. The authors in this volume forge new approaches to architectural studies by focusing on the interaction between monuments, artworks, and their viewers at different points in space and time. Contributors are Christopher A. Born, Elizabeth Carson Pastan, Nicole Corrigan, Gillian B. Elliott, Barbara Franzé, Anne Heath, Philip Jacks, Divya Kumar-Dumas, Brigitte Kurmann-Schwarz, Ashley J. Laverock, Susan Leibacher Ward, Elodie Leschot, Meghan Mattsson McGinnis, Michael Sizer, Kelly Thor, and Laura J. Whatley. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Gillian B. Elliott , Anne HeathPublisher: Brill Imprint: Brill Volume: 18 Weight: 1.075kg ISBN: 9789004506961ISBN 10: 9004506969 Pages: 484 Publication Date: 21 April 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsList of Figures Notes on Contributors Unfolding Narratives: An Introduction Gillian B. Elliott and Anne Heath PART 1: Moving Bodies in Space and Narrative 1 Seeing and Not Seeing the Rose Window of Lausanne Cathedral Elizabeth Carson Pastan and Brigitte Kurmann-Schwarz 2 Engaging the Beholder through Image and Inscription in the 13th-Century Stained-Glass Window of St. Margaret of Antioch at Ardagger Abbey Ashley J. Laverock 3 Circulating among Friends: Mary Magdalene, Martha, and Lazarus and the Pilgrimage to the Holy Tear at the Abbey of La Trinité, Vendôme Anne Heath PART 2: Topography and Politicizing Space 4 Written in Stone: Recovering the Magical Role of the locus sanctus in the Medieval Life of San Millán de la Cogolla Kelly Thor 5 Reading Architecture in Landscape: Visitor Reflections at a Mirror Wall (Sigiriya, Sri Lanka) Divya Kumar-Dumas 6 A Holy Hole, Anglo-Saxon Bones, and a Jerusalem Chapel: Redefining Sacred Geography at Winchester Cathedral in the 12th Century Laura J. Whatley 7 Theatrum Paulli or Balneum Paulli: Interpreting the Markets of Trajan in the Middle Ages and Renaissance Philip Jacks PART 3: Spatial Alteration and Reception 8 Transformation at the Garden Gate: The Romanesque Parapets of San Pietro al Monte in Civate Gillian B. Elliott 9 Between Universal and Local Practices: The Unfolding Narrative of the Resurrection of the Christ and Its Public in the Wide-Open Galilee at the Priory of St. Fortunatus, Charlieu Elodie Leschot 10 From Mosque-Cathedral to Gothic Cathedral: Rewriting and Rebuilding in Medieval Toledo Nicole Corrigan 11 Change Unchanging: Mediating the Sacred Spaces of Ise Grand Shrines over Time Christopher A. Born PART 4: Assembly and Space 12 On the Road to the Great Hof: Moving through Space and Time at Old Uppsala Meghan Mattsson McGinnis 13 Abbot Gauzlin’s Tower Porch in Fleury (c.1015–30): A Social Narrative in Favor of the Capetians Barbara Franzé 14 The South Portal at the Cathedral of Le Mans as a Processional Objective Susan Leibacher Ward 15 Storming the Palace: Crowd Incursions into Aristocratic Spaces in Medieval Revolts Michael Sizer Conclusion IndexReviews'Art, Architecture, and the Moving Viewer, c. 300-1500 CE offers the readers a thoughtfully curated series of fifteen essays that explore holistic approaches to medieval spaces as they may have been experienced by contemporaries of various social classes over time. Through the agency of “the moving viewer,” the chapters yoke symbolic readings of spaces, artwork, and architecture in settings ranging from an intimate side chapel to an immense rock-mound mesa [...] the volume’s editors and chapter authors succeed in bringing provocative discoveries to the global readership of medievalists in art, architectural, and spatial history. It is a collection that supports and extends research into the nuances and details of cultural reception theory and, perhaps further along, into the neurological understanding of medieval environments.' Kim Sexton, in The Medieval Review 23.05.06. Author InformationGillian B. Elliott, Ph.D. (2005), University of Texas at Austin, is Professorial Lecturer of Medieval Art History at George Washington University. She has published articles about Romanesque sculpture and the book Sculpted Thresholds and the Liturgy of Transformation in Medieval Lombardy (Routledge, 2022). Anne Heath, Ph.D. (2005), Brown University, is the Howard R. and Margaret E. Sluyter Associate Professor of Art History at Hope College, Michigan. Her essays on Gothic architecture and performance culture have appeared in the journals Viator and Speculum. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |