[ISHMap-List] Body-Worlds: Opicinus de Canistris and the Medieval Cartographic Imagination
Joel Kovarsky
joel at theprimemeridian.com
Wed Jul 9 14:24:53 CEST 2014
Recently released:
Whittington, Karl (2014). _Body-Worlds: Opicinus de Canistris and the
Medieval Cartographic Imagination_. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of
Mediaeval Studies, 212 pp., ill. ISBN: 9780888441867. $85.
http://www.pims.ca/publications/books/st186.html
From the online description:
"On the last day of March in 1334, an Italian priest named Opicinus de
Canistris fell ill. His body slowly became paralyzed, and he temporarily
lost his ability to speak. But during this illness, he had a divine
vision, and his "interior eyes were opened to discern the images of the
earth and the sea." These "images," visions of continents and oceans
transformed into human figures, resulted in drawings that combined
highly accurate maps of the pan-Mediterranean world with striking and
often highly sexualized images of human bodies, forms that Karl
Whittington calls "body-worlds."
Creating allegories of natural and spiritual worlds, these drawings defy
classification. While they relate closely to contemporary maps and
seacharts, religious iconography, medical illustration, and cosmological
diagrams, Opicinus's drawings cannot be assimilated to any of these
categories. In seeking to visualize the possibilities raised by an
entire new way of looking at the world they remain sui generis and a
formidable challenge to interpretation. In their beautiful strangeness
they complicate many of our most fundamental assumptions about medieval
visual culture, even as they help us grasp some of its most basic
operations. "
Some added preliminary details are accessible online:
http://www.pims.ca/pdf/st186.pdf .
Joel Kovarsky
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