Environmental Values in Christian Art
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
SUNY series on Religion and the Environment
ISBN-10
0791472655
ISBN-13
9780791472651
Publisher
State University of New York Press
Imprint
State University of New York Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Nov 29th, 2007
Print length
292 Pages
Weight
567 grams
Product Classification:
Christianity
Ksh 13,000.00
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Discusses the expression of environmental values in Christian art as it displaced pagan aesthetics from the third century to the Reformation.
This book looks at what art reveals about the environmental values of Christianity. As western Europe transitioned to Christianity, pagan religious aesthetics changed or were displaced. Focusing on Christian art and architecture from early third-century Rome to seventeenth-century Netherlands, Susan Power Bratton examines this transition. She explores the relationship between Christ and nature in emergent Christian art, the role nonhumans play in this art, and how Christian art represents the ownership and management of natural resources.
The first section of the book discusses Christian art in imperial Rome and monastic Ireland''s contributionfrom high crosses to the Book of Kellsand evaluates the claim that Christianity suppressed the positive portrayal of nature in pre-Christian art. The second section investigates changes in cosmology from the early Middle Ages through the Gothic era and examines their implications for environmental economics. The final section analyzes the paintings of the Italian Renaissance and Dutch Golden Age and the impact of an emerging scientific worldview on the spiritual meaning of the landscape.
The first section of the book discusses Christian art in imperial Rome and monastic Ireland''s contributionfrom high crosses to the Book of Kellsand evaluates the claim that Christianity suppressed the positive portrayal of nature in pre-Christian art. The second section investigates changes in cosmology from the early Middle Ages through the Gothic era and examines their implications for environmental economics. The final section analyzes the paintings of the Italian Renaissance and Dutch Golden Age and the impact of an emerging scientific worldview on the spiritual meaning of the landscape.
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