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Signs and Meaning in Eighteenth-Century Art : Epistemology, Rhetoric, Painting, Poesy, Music, Dramatic Performance, and G. F. Haendel

Part of the American University Studies, Series 20: Fine Arts series
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Signs and Meaning explains historical assumptions about eighteenth-century art and performance, and the signs employed.

It assumes that how artists thought they made art and how audiences thought they received it was how it was made, received, and understood.

Eighteenth-century epistemological and rhetorical assumptions bring together meaning and practices of rhetoric, philosophy, literature, painting, dramatic performance, and music.

Musical drama shows the widest range of signs for an audience, presenting and representing the passions as the basis for the understanding of human nature and actions.

This book starts with explanations of assumptions, and ends with analyses of G.

F. Haendel's dramatic oratorios.

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Product Details
Peter Lang Publishing Inc
0820437239 / 9780820437231
Hardback
01/01/1998
United States
410 pages, 7 ill.
160 x 230 mm, 740 grams
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