The Graphic Revolution in Early Modern Europe: The Politics and Technologies of Representations in the Visual, Literary, and Theatrical Arts from 1400 to 1660: Difference between revisions

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From the fourteenth century on there was an exploration of technical innovations in the arts and sciences in Europe. New representational techniques and forms proliferated in the visual arts; in the writing and printing; in mercantile practices; in mathematics, cartography, and cosmology; in anatomy and medicine; in pedagogy and the regulation of conduct; in theatre and public spectacle; in parliamentary institutions; and in the control of space and its occupants through the political transformation of architecture into civic planning. Much of this activity was based in graphic inventions and improvements that affected signifying practices in all media. The resulting innovations in notational and symbol systems literally underwrote other cultural, social, economic, and political changes. They produced growing awareness that by altering the materials, methods, and modes of representation, one could alter whatever one's representation signified or imitated. These innovations and changes may therefore be viewed in large part as the consequences of a revolution in graphic techniques.                                    
From the fourteenth century on there was an exploration of technical innovations in the arts and sciences in Europe. New representational techniques and forms proliferated in the visual arts; in the writing and printing; in mercantile practices; in mathematics, cartography, and cosmology; in anatomy and medicine; in pedagogy and the regulation of conduct; in theatre and public spectacle; in parliamentary institutions; and in the control of space and its occupants through the political transformation of architecture into civic planning. Much of this activity was based in graphic inventions and improvements that affected signifying practices in all media. The resulting innovations in notational and symbol systems literally underwrote other cultural, social, economic, and political changes. They produced growing awareness that by altering the materials, methods, and modes of representation, one could alter whatever one's representation signified or imitated. These innovations and changes may therefore be viewed in large part as the consequences of a revolution in graphic techniques.                                    
'''Issues and Texts'''                                    
Part One                                    
Part Two                                    


'''PARTICIPATING FACULTY'''                                    
'''PARTICIPATING FACULTY'''                                    

Revision as of 15:07, 30 June 2017

NEH Summer Institute

June 14 through July 29, 1994

Promotional Materials

Directed by Harry Berger, Jr., Professor of Literature and Art History at Cowell College at the University of California, Santa Cruz                                    

The Institute                                    

From the fourteenth century on there was an exploration of technical innovations in the arts and sciences in Europe. New representational techniques and forms proliferated in the visual arts; in the writing and printing; in mercantile practices; in mathematics, cartography, and cosmology; in anatomy and medicine; in pedagogy and the regulation of conduct; in theatre and public spectacle; in parliamentary institutions; and in the control of space and its occupants through the political transformation of architecture into civic planning. Much of this activity was based in graphic inventions and improvements that affected signifying practices in all media. The resulting innovations in notational and symbol systems literally underwrote other cultural, social, economic, and political changes. They produced growing awareness that by altering the materials, methods, and modes of representation, one could alter whatever one's representation signified or imitated. These innovations and changes may therefore be viewed in large part as the consequences of a revolution in graphic techniques.                                    

PARTICIPATING FACULTY                                    

Elizabeth J. Bellamy                                    

Margaret D. Carroll                                    

David Lee Miller                                    

Louis Adrian Montrose