| Literature DB >> 26290618 |
Abstract
This article de-constructs and re-constructs the dynamic of a sixteenth-century political dispute between the Catholic Bavarian Duke Wilhelm V and the Protestant Saxon Elector August I. By focusing on the visual imagery which ignited the dispute, the paper explores sixteenth-century 'ways of seeing' and the epistemic role realistic images played in the production of knowledge about the natural world. While the peculiar dynamic of the affair is based on a specific understanding of the evidential role of images, the paper also argues that the wider socio-cultural context, in particular certain strategies of truth-telling, provide further clues as to the dynamic and closure of the affair.Entities:
Keywords: Albrecht V of Bavaria; Anatomy; August I of Saxony; German Reformation; Jesuit Order; Michel Foucault; Rudolf Virchow; visual culture
Year: 2013 PMID: 26290618 PMCID: PMC4538784 DOI: 10.1177/0265691413479085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Hist Q ISSN: 0265-6914