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Author Lefaivre, Liane.

Title Leon Battista Alberti's hypnerotomachia poliphili : re-cognizing the architectural body in the early Italian Renaissance / Liane Lefaivre.

Publication Info. Cambridge, Mass. ; London : MIT Press, 2005.

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Location Call No. Status
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Internet  WORLD WIDE WEB E-BOOK MIT    Downloadable
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Edition 1st MIT Press pbk. ed.
Description 297 pages : illustrations ; 28 cm
Note Originally published: 1997.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-293) and index.
Contents Introduction : metaphors and mental leaps : toward a cognitive history of architecture -- 1. The read Hypnerotomachia, or the Hypnerotomachia as knowledge -- 2. The unread Hypnerotomachia, or design as dreamwork and thought experiment -- 3. The hard Hypnerotomachia, or the code of recombination -- 4. Implausible authors -- 5. The real Poliphilo -- 6. Reconfiguring the architectural body, changing the architectural mind -- 7. The dangerous body -- 8. The marvelous body -- 9. The divine body -- 10. The humanist body.
Summary "Part fictional narrative and part scholarly treatise, richly illustrated with wood engravings, the book is an extreme case of erotic furor, aimed at everything - especially architecture - that the protagonist, Poliphilo, encounters in his quest for his beloved, Polia. Among the instances of the book's manifesto-like character is Polia's tirade defending the right of women to express their own sexuality, probably the first sustained argument of this type, which lifts the book's erotic theme from the realm of ribaldry to the more daring one of sexual politics. Liane Lefaivre offers the closest critical-theoretical reading of Hypnerotomachia Poliphili to date, placing it within both the historical context of the quattrocento and the rethinking of the metaphor of the architectural body." "Lefaivre is the first to attribute this strange, dreamlike book definitively to none other than the arch-rationalist Leon Battista Alberti. Intended as his final text, she argues, the book is the legacy of a humanist passionate about his life's work, a treatise on the role of dreamwork in design by one of the most creative minds of the Renaissance, and a manifesto in defense of humanism by a man who had been dismissed by an anti-humanist pope after a thirty-year career in the papal service."--Jacket.
Local Note MIT Press DTL OA MIT Titles
Subject Colonna, Francesco, -1527. Hypnerotomachia Poliphili.
Alberti, Leon Battista, 1404-1472 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Colonna, Francesco, -1527 -- Authorship.
Alberti, Leon Battista, 1404-1472 -- Authorship.
Alberti, Leon Battista, 1404-1472. (OCoLC)fst00030004
Colonna, Francesco, -1527. (OCoLC)fst01813252
Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (Colonna, Francesco) (OCoLC)fst01357901
Architecture, Renaissance -- Italy.
Architecture, Renaissance. (OCoLC)fst00813917
Authorship. (OCoLC)fst00822442
Italy. (OCoLC)fst01204565
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc. (OCoLC)fst01411635
ISBN 0262621959 (paperback)
9780262621953
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