On Leon Baptista Alberti : His Literary and Aesthetic Theories (hardcover)

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€ 40,00
Listen to Alberti's voice. This is what Mark Jarzombek has done in studying virtually all of Alberti's writings on philosophy, ethics, aesthetics, architecture, and literature. Jarzombek's thorough grasp of Alberti's thought and painstaking analysis of his elusive identity transform our image of this remarkable man, carving out a new place for Alberti in literary theory, art history, and Renaissance scholarship. Instead of warming over the stereotypes of Alberti as a "universal man" or as a proponent of "civic humanism," Jarzombek explores Alberti's views of the relationship between the writer and society. He asserts that, while Alberti was indeed an architect, an art theorist, and a man of letters, he was above all a theoretician of writing: "Everywhere one turns, the problems of writing, authorship, and textuality seem to appear, from his first writings. . .to his last." Opening up the possibilities for a different type of discussion of Alberti and of such major works as "De pictura" and "De re ae dificatora," Jarzombek places Alberti more accurately within the context of his times and clarifies the relationship among his works. Jarzombek's investigation brings to light themes that have remained hidden in the complex world of Alberti's speculations.
Author Mark Jarzombek
Language English
Published 1989
Binding HBK
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