My Photo

search


Twitter latest

    follow me on Twitter
    Blog powered by TypePad
    Member since 07/2003

    « I'm talking Tina, and so are you | Main | Cyberchondria, but not as we know it »

    August 06, 2007

    Theater of remembered virtues: a Reformation-era virtual space

    There are centuries of virtual worlds in texts before the advent of digital spaces.  Today's case is a Counterreformation* document, a late 16th-century manuscript called Theatrum virtutum divi Stanislai Hosii (The Theatre of the Virtues of the Venerable Stanislaus Hosius).  It's a tribute collection to Stanislaus Hosius, a ardent antiprotestant cleric.  Notice that each poem, each image fits into a larger scheme of a virtual space, a palace of virtues.
    Theatrumvirtutumtomasztretersacraet

    Compare with the long theater of memory/art of memory tradition.  Interesting to think about great memory master Giordano Bruno, active, then burned at the stake, around the same time as this book's assemblage.

    Compare, too, with the Hypnerotomachia Poliphilii, which creates an elaborately realized virtual space.

    *How important is the Reformation in the history of information?  The printing press revolution opens it up.  Strategies responding to early modern information overload, such as the cyclopedia, exit from the other side.

    (via BibliOdyssey)

    TrackBack

    TrackBack URL for this entry:
    http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/1423/20619010

    Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Theater of remembered virtues: a Reformation-era virtual space:

    Comments

    Post a comment

    If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

    Flickr images


    • www.flickr.com
      This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from BryanAlexander. Make your own badge here.

    Technorati

    Pages