This book presents, for the first time, a coherent, tightly argued history of medieval mediality, which also casts a new light on modern thinking about the medial. Abundance and lack constitute the defining feature of all media forms. These forms always undertake to preserve, transmit, or give access to something that might otherwise be lost, or remain inaccessible or ineffective. But at the same time they are always in danger of disguising or distorting what they are referring to, or of missing their target altogether.
Medieval culture offers an excellent chance to observe this. In this culture, media forms were places of mediated immediacy. They transported a presence of the divine, but also knowledge of its unattainability. This volume investigates the multi-layered and fascinating approaches of medieval authors to the word and writing, the body and materiality, and their experimentation with the possibilities of media before the concept was invented.



Autorentext

KieningChristian:

Christian Kiening is full professor of German literature at the University of Zürich and director of the National Competence Centre in Research "Mediality".



Inhalt

1. Introduction
2. Model
3. Presence
4. Word
5. Writing
6. Body
7. Materiality
8. Spacetime
9. Metonymy
10. Conclusion
References
List of Illustrations
Index

Titel
Mediality in the Middle Ages
Untertitel
Abundance and Lack
Übersetzer
EAN
9781641890762
Format
PDF
Veröffentlichung
31.12.2019
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
13.67 MB
Anzahl Seiten
336