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Acknowledgements

In: The Figure of the Nymph in Early Modern Culture
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Acknowledgements

Nymphs have accompanied us for quite some time. Ever since developing the idea of moving Warburg’s ‘bewegtes Beiwerk’ to centre stage and dedicating a volume to the ubiquitous, yet eternally overlooked nymphs, we have explored the topic at a series of workshops and in various research contexts. The field was first charted in a series of panels at the Renaissance Society of America Annual Meeting in Berlin in 2015. This was followed by the workshop “Nymphs in Early Modern Culture” held at the University of Münster in early 2016, which brought together panellists from the RSA meeting as well as a group of additional scholars. This workshop was financed by the Cluster of Excellence “Religion und Politik” of the University of Münster and by the Seminar für Lateinische Philologie des Mittelalters und der Neuzeit. At Freie Universität Berlin, the development of the volume has been closely linked to a project headed by Anita Traninger on the Spanish Golden Age novel, supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) in the framework of the research group “Discursivizations of the New”. At the University of Münster, it is part of the project in the Cluster of Excellence entitled “Die neulateinische Emblematik. Die multimediale Gattung der neulateinischen (und mehrsprachigen) Emblematik als Vermittlerin politischen und religiösen Denkens, ca. 1530–ca. 1670”, directed by Karl Enenkel.

We owe thanks to Charlotte Bohn, who helped organise the Berlin panels, and Cornelia Selent, who took care of the administrative side of the Münster workshop. Yola von Rohden, Angie Martiens and Marie Lippert have supported us at various stages with editing and managing the production of the volume. Christian Peters gave us technical help with the illustrations. Millay Hyatt and Meredith McGroarty have taken care of English language editing. We are most grateful to all of them.

Berlin – Münster, 3 October 2017

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The Figure of the Nymph in Early Modern Culture

Series:  Intersections, Volume: 54
Cover The Figure of the Nymph in Early Modern Culture
E-Book ISBN:
9789004364356
Publisher:
Brill
Print Publication Date:
14 Mar 2018
  • Subjects
    • Art History
      • Art History
    • Classical Studies
      • Classical Tradition & Reception Studies
    • History
      • Early Modern History
      • Art History
    • Literature and Cultural Studies
      • Literature, Arts & Science
Front Matter
Copyright page
Acknowledgements
Notes on the Editors
Notes on the Contributors
List of Illustrations
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Figure of the Nymph in Early Modern Culture
Part 1 Nymphs between the Visual Arts and Literature
Chapter 2 Pleasures of the Imagination: Narrating the Nymph, from Boccaccio to Lope De Vega
Chapter 3 Salmacis, Hermaphrodite, and the Inversion of Gender: Allegorical Interpretations and Pictorial Representations of an Ovidian Myth, ca. 1300–1770
Chapter 4 The Sleeping Nymph Revisited: Ekphrasis, Genius Loci and Silence
Chapter 5 ‘Who, Then, is the “Nympha”?’ An Iconographic Analysis of the Figure of the Maid in the Tornabuoni Frescoes
Part 2 Literary Representations
Chapter 6 Lamenting, Dancing, Praising: The Multilayered Presence of Nymphs in Florentine Elegiac Poetry of the Quattrocento1
Chapter 7 An Epiphanic Figure with the Power to Bind: Lia’s Role in Boccaccio’s Comedia delle ninfe fiorentine
Chapter 8 Renaissance Nymphs as Intermediaries in Early Modern German Territorial Politics
Chapter 9 Discursive Sisters of the Arts, Raw Material of Inspiration: The Early Pegnitz Flower Society’s Nymphs
Part 3 Garden Architecture
Chapter 10 The Mediality of the Nymph in the Cultural Context of Pirro Visconti’s Villa at Lainate
Chapter 11 Nymphs Bathing in the King’s Garden: La Granja de San Ildefonso and Caserta
Part 4 Music
Chapter 12 Venez plorer ma desolation: Lamenting and Mourning Nymphs in Culture and Music around 1500
Chapter 13 The Nymph’s Voice as an Acoustic Reflection of the Self
Part 5 Aetiology and Antiquarianism
Chapter 14 Founding Sisters: Nymphs and Aetiology in Humanist Latin Poetry
Chapter 15 Our White Ladies on the Graves: Historicisations of Nymphs in Early Modern Antiquarianism
Back Matter
Index Nominum

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