Possessing nature : museums, collecting, and scientific culture in early modern Italy

書誌事項

Possessing nature : museums, collecting, and scientific culture in early modern Italy

Paula Findlen

(Studies on the history of society and culture / Victoria E. Bonnell and Lynn Hunt, editors, 20)

University of California Press, c1994

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 10

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Bibliography: p. 409-432

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In 1500 few Europeans regarded nature as a subject worthy of inquiry. Yet fifty years later the first museums of natural history had appeared in Italy, dedicated to the marvels of nature. Italian patricians, their curiosity fuelled by new voyages of exploration and the humanist rediscovery of nature, created vast collections as a means of knowing the world and used this knowledge to their greater glory. Drawing on extensive archives of visitors' books, letters, travel journals, memoirs, and pleas for patronage, Paula Findlen reconstructs the lost social world of Renaissance and Baroque museums. She follows the new study of natural history as it moved out of the universities and into sixteenth- and seventeenth-century scientific societies, religious orders, and princely courts. Findlen argues convincingly that natural history as a discipline blurred the border between the ancients and the moderns, between collecting in order to recover ancient wisdom and the development of new textual and experimental scholarship. Her vivid account reveals how the scientific revolution grew from the constant mediation between the old forms of knowledge and the new.

「Nielsen BookData」 より

関連文献: 1件中  1-1を表示

詳細情報

ページトップへ