The humanities: culture, continuity & change 4 Excess, inquiry, and restraint : 1600 to 1800
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Upper Saddle River, NJ
Pearson/Prentice Hall
2008
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XV S., S. 801 - 1047 zahlr. Ill., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780130862679 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The humanities |b culture, continuity & change |n 4 |p Excess, inquiry, and restraint : 1600 to 1800 |c Henry M. Sayre |
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adam_text | Series
Contents
Book 1
The Ancient World and the Classical Past:
Prehistory to
200
ce
1
From Forest to Farm: The Rise of Culture
2
Mesopotamia: Power and Social Order in the Fertile
Crescent
3
The Stability of Ancient Egypt: Flood
and Sun
4
China, India, and Africa: Early Civilizations
5
Bronze Age Culture in the Aegean World:
The Great Traders
6
The Rise of Greek City-States:
War and Victory
7
Golden Age Athens: The School of Hellas
S
Rome: Urban Life and Imperial Majesty
Book
2
Medieval Europe and the Shaping of World
Cultures:
200
CE
to
1400
9
The Late Roman Empire, Judaism, and the Rise of
Christianity: Power and Faith
) Ö
Byzantium: Constantinople and the Byzantine
Empire
11
The Rise and Spread of Islam:
A New Religion
X2 Fiefdom and Monastery: The Merging
of Germanic and Roman Cultures
13
The Romanesque Tradition: Pilgrimage and
Crusade
í
4
The Gothic Style: Faith and Knowledge in an Age of
Inquiry
15
Siena and Florence in the Fourteenth Century:
Toward a New Humanism
16
China, India, Japan, Africa, and the Americas
before
1400
Book
3
The Renaissance and the Age of Encounter:
1400
to
1600
17
Florence and the Early Renaissance: Humanism in
Italy
ÎS
The High Renaissance in Rome: Papal Patronage
13
The Venetian Renaissance: Palace and Lagoon
20
The Renaissance in the North: Between Wealth
and Want
21
The Reformation: A New Church and the
Arts
22
The Early Counter-Reformation and Mannerism:
Restraint and Invention
23
The Age of Encounter: West Africa, China,
and Japan
24
England in the Tudor Age: This Other
Eden
Book
4
Excess, Inquiry, and Restraint:
1600
to
1800
25
The Baroque in Italy: The Church and Its Appeal
26
The Secular Baroque in the North: The Art of
Observation
27
The Baroque Court: Absolute Power and Royal
Patronage
2(8
The Rise of the Enlightenment in England: The
Claims of Reason
29
The Rococo and the Enlightenment on the
Continent: Privilege and Reason
30
Cross-Cultural Encounter: Exploration and Trade
in the Enlightenment
31
The Rights of Man: Revolution in America
32
A Culture of Change in France: Neoclassicism and
Revolution
Book
5
Romanticism, Realism, and
Empire:
1800
to
1900
33
The Self in Nature: The Rise of Romanticism
34
A Darker World: Napoleon and the Romantic
Imagination
35
Industry and the Working Class:
A New Realism
36
Revolution and Civil War: The Conditions of
Modern Life
37
The Rise of Bourgeois Culture: Living the Good
Life
38
The Gilded Age in America: Expansion and
Conflict
39
Global Confrontations: The Challenge to Cultural
Identity
40
From Realism to Symbolism: The
Fin de Siècle
Book
6
Modernism and the Globalization of Cultures:
1900
to the Present
41
The Era of Invention: Paris and the Rise
of Modernism
42
The Great War and Its Impact: A Lost Generation
43
New York and Skyscraper Culture:
Making it New
44
Between the Wars: The Age of Anxiety
45
World War II and Its Aftermath: Devastation and
Recovery
4S The Turbulent
1960s:
Decade of Change
47
The Postmodern Era: Multiple Meanings in a
Changing World
48
Blurring The Boundaries: The Global Village
in the Information Age
III
Contents
Preface
vu
Excess, Inquiry, and Restraint:
1600
to
1800 801
s . The Baroque in Italy
The Church and Its Appeal
805
Baroque Style and the Counter-Reformation
808
Sculpture and Architecture: Bernini and His Followers
809
READING
25.1
from Teresa of
Ávila,
Visions, Chapter
29
of The Life
of Teresa ofkvua (before
1567) 810
The Drama of Painting: Caravaggio and the
Caravaggisti
815
Master of Light and Dark: Caravaggio
815
READING
25.2
John Donne, Batter My Heart
(1618) 817
Elisabetta
Sirani
and Artemisia
Gentileschi:
Caravaggisti
Women
817
Ceiling Painting: The Illusion of Heaven
819
READING
25.4
from Ignatius Loyola, Spiritual Exercises, Fifth Exercise
(1548) 822
Venice and Baroque Music
822
Giovanni
Gabrieli
and the Drama of Harmony
822
Claudio
Monteverdi and the Birth of Opera
823
READING
25.5
from
Giulio Caccini,
New Worh of Music
(1602) 824
Arcangelo Corelli
and the Sonata
825
Antonio Vivaldi and the Concerto
826
Reading
READING
25.3
John Donne, The Flea
(1633) 828
í
MATERIALS AND TECNIQUES The Facade from Renaissance to
| Baroque
814
j
FOCUS Caravaggio s The Supper at Emmaus
820
CULTURAL PARALLELS Large-Scale Paintings in Rome and Japan
822
VOICES
Claudio
Monteverdi Appeals for His Salary
824
CULTURAL PARALLELS Virtuosity in Venice and Amsterdam
825
Continuity
Ss
Change The End of Italian Ascendency
831
The Secular Baroque in the
North
The Art of Observation
833
Calvinist
Amsterdam: City of Contradictions
835
Gaining Independence from Spain
836
Tulipomania
836
The Dutch Reformed Church: Strict Doctrine and White
washed Spaces
838
iv
The Science of Observation
839
Francis Bacon and the Empirical Method
839
René
Descartes and the Deductive Method
839
READING
26.2
from
René
Descartes, Meditations
(1641) 840
Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, and the Telescope
840
Antoni
van Leeuwenhoek, Robert Hooke, and the
Microscope
842
Dutch Vernacular Painting: Art of the Familiar
842
New Imagery: Still Life, Landscape, and Genre
Painting
842
Johannes
Vermeer
and Domestic Interiors
846
Frans Hals
and the Group Portrait
848
Rembrandt van
Rijn
and the Drama of Light
848
The Baroque Keyboard
854
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck s Fantasies for the Organ
854
The North German School:
Johann
Sebastian Bach
854
Readings
READING
26.1
from Francis Bacon,
Novum Organum Scientiarum,
(The New Method of Science)
( 1620) 857
READING
26.3
from
René
Descartes, Discourse on Method (Part IV)
(1637) 858
CpiřCWV- F -./V;4)?UiH
CULTURAL PARALLELS Scientific Inquiry in Northern Europe
and China
841
FOCUS Rembrandt s The Anatomy Lesson of Dr.
Тиф
852
setry
Continuity
&
Change Tensjon between
pijace
and Court 861
°У /І
The Baroque Court
Absolute Power and Royal
Patronage
863
Versailles and the Rise of Absolutism
864
The Arts of the French Court
869
The Painting of Peter Paul Rubens: Color and
Sensuality
869
The Painting of Nicolas
Poussin:
Classical Decorum
872
Music and Dance at the Court of Louis
XIV 873
Theater at the French Court
874
READING 27.1a from
Molière, Tartuffe,
Act V
(1664) 875
The Art and Politics of the English Court
876
Anthony van Dyck: Court Painter
877
Portraiture in the American Colonies
878
Puritan and Cavalier Literature
878
READING 27.2a Anne Bradstreet, To My Dear and Loving Husband
(1667) 879
READING
27.3
Robert
Herrick,
To the Virgins, To Make Much
of Time
(1648) 879
Henry
Purceii
and English Opera
880
CONTENTS
The Arts of the Spanish Court
880
Diego Velazquez and the Royal Portrait
880
The Literature of the Spanish Court
884
The Baroque in the Americas
885
The
Cuzco
School
885
Baroque Music in the Americas:
Sor Juana Inés
de la
Cruz
Continuity
g,
Change
READING
27.4
Sor Juana Inés de la
Cruz, To Her Self-Portrait
(posthumous publication
1700) 887
The Churrigueresque Style:
Retablos
and Portals in New
Spain
887
Readings
READING
27.1
from
Molière, Tartuffe,
Act III, scenes
2
and
3 (1664) 890
READING
27.2
Anne Bradstreet, Here Follows Some Verses upon the
Burning of Our House, July 10th,
1666 (1667) 892
Special Features
VOICES Life for the Other French
867
CULTURAL PARALLELS A Shogun s Power in Japan
868
CULTURAL PARALLELS
Kabuki
Theater in Japan
880
FOCUS Velazquez s
Las Meninas
882
Excess and Restraint
895
°2) ^J
The Rise of the Enlighten«
ment
in England
The Claims of Reason
897
The New London: Toward the Enlightenment
900
READING
28.1
from John Dryden,
Annus
Mirabilis,
1667 900
Absolutism Versus Liberalism: Thomas Hobbes and
John Locke
901
READING
28.3
from Locke s
Essa?
on Human Understanding
( 1690) 904
John Milton s Paradise Lost
904
READING
гв-ба-Ь
from John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book
5 (1667) 905
The English Enlightenment
905
Satire: Enlightenment Wit
906
READING
28.7
from Jonathan Swift,
Guüwer s
Travels, Book IV,
Chapter VI
(1726) 909
READING
28.8
from Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man
( 1732) 909
Isaac Newton: The Laws of Physics
910
The Industrial Revolution
910
Handel and the English Oratorio
913
Literacy and the New Print Culture
913
The
Tarier
and The Spectator
913
READING
28.9
from Joseph Addison, Trie Spectator, No.
10,
Monday,
March
12, 1711 915
The Rise of the English Novel
915
READING
28.10
from Samuel Richardson s Pamela
(1740) 916
READING
28.11
from Henry Fielding, Shameh
(1741) 917
READING 28.12a from Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice,
Chapter
1 (1813) 917
READING 28.12b from Jane Austen, Pride and
Prejuäce,
Chapter
43 (1813) 918
READING
28.13
from Samuel Johnson, The Rambler, No.
4,
Saturday,
March
31,1750 919
Readings
READING
28.2
from Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan
(1651) 920
READING
28.4
from John Locke, The Second Treatise of Government
(1690) 922
READING
28.5
from John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book
6,
(1667) 923
READING
28.6
from Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal
(1729) 925
Special
Fkatukís
CULTURAL PARALLELS Growth and Commerce in London and
China
900
FOCUS Christopher Wren s Saint Paul s Cathedral
902
CULTURAL PARALLELS Crisis in Holland
904
VOICES Rules for Behaviour in Company
914
Continuity grange signboard of a New World
931
V)
(ci)
The Rococo and the Enlighten¬
ment on the Continent
Privilege and Reason
933
The Rococo
936
Rococo Painting in France: The
Fête Galante
and the Art
of Love
937
Rococo Architecture and Landscape Design in Central
Europe and England
940
The
Philosophes
946
Denis Diderot and the
Encycbpédie
946
READING
29.1
from Law of Nature or Natural Law, from the
Encyclopédie
(1751-1772) 947
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Cost of the Social
Contract
948
READING
29.3
from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, Book
1,
Chapter
4
( Slavery )
(1762) 948
READING
29.4
from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin
of Inequality among Men
(1755) 949
Voltaire and French Satire
949
Art Criticism and Theory
950
Rococo and Classical Music
952
The Symphonic Orchestra
952
Symphonic Form
953
The String Quartets of Joseph Haydn
955
Wolfgang
Amadeus
Mozart: Music to Chew On
955
The Popularization of Opera
956
Readings
READING
29.2
from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Confessions, Book
1
(completed
1770,
published
1780) 961
READING
29.5
from Voltaire,
Candide
(1758) 962
Special Features
CULTURAL PARALLELS Gardens in England and Japan
944
FOCUS Mozart s Symphony No.
40
in
G
Minor (K.
550),
First
Movement: Moito Aliegro
958
^4
Continuity
g.
Change The End of the Rococo
967
VI
CONTENTS
;) (( )) Cross-Cultural
Encounter
Exploration and Trade in the
Enlightenment
969
The South Pacific: The Cultures Captain Cook
Encountered
971
Polynesia
971
Melanesia
974
Australia
975
China and Europe: Cross-Cultural Contact
976
The Arts in the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911) 977
Celebrating Tradition: The Great Jade Carving
980
India and Europe: Cross-Cultural Connections
982
Islamic India: The Taste for Western Art
982
Mogul Architecture: The Taj Mahal
983
READING
30.1
Shah Jahan, inscription on the Taj Mahal,
ca.
1658 984
Native American Traditions
986
The Pueblo Cultures of New Spain
986
Weaving and Basketry
986
The Northeast Woodlands Tribes
Reading
READING
30.2
Logan, Speech at the End of Lord Dunmore s War, from
Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia
(1784) 992
.
VOICES James Cook Interprets Tahitian Behavior
972
!
CULTURAL PARALLELS The Voyages of Captain Cook on French
Wallpaper
973
FOCUS Europe s
Chinoiserie
Craze
978
CULTURAL PARALLELS Two Islamic Rulers
985
Continuity
&
Change The Growing Crisis of the Slave Trade
995
The Rights of Man
Revolution in America
997
The American Revolution
998
The Road to Revolt: War and Taxation
999
The Declaration of Independence
1000
READING
31.1
from The Declaration of Independence
(1776) 1001
Neoclassicism in Britain and America
1001
The British Influence: Robert Adam and Josiah
Wedgwood
1003
American Neoclassical Architecture
1004
Neoclassical Sculpture in America
1006
The Issue of Slavery
1008
Autobiographical and Fictional Accounts of Slavery
1008
READING 31.3a from Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative
of the Life
ofOfóndah
Equiano, or Gustavus
Vassa
the
African
(П89)
1009
READING
31.4
Phyllis Wheatley, Twas mercy brought me from my
Pagan land
(1773) 1011
The Economic Argument for Slavery and Revolution:
Free Trade
1014
The Abolitionist Movement in Britain and
America
1014
The African Diaspora
1015
Readings
READING
31.2
James Madison, Federalist No.
10 (1787) 1016
READING
31.3
from The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah
Equiano
(1789) 1017
READING
31.5
from Aphra Behn, Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave
( 1688)
1019
VOICES Former Slaves Petition for Tax Relief
1009
CULTURAL PARALLELS The Dream of Freedom
1011
FOCUS Blake s The Little Black Boy and The Chimney Sweeper
1012
Continuity
&
Change The Rise of Neoclassicism in France
1021
^
-[л
A Culture of Change in France
Neoclassicism and Revolution
1023
Jacques-Louis David and the Neoclassical Style
1026
Three Paintings of
1787 1030
Angelica Kauffmann and Neoclassical Motherhood
1032
The French Revolution
1032
The Estates General of
1789
and the National Assembly
1032
The Great Fear and the October Days
1034
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the
Constitution of
1791 1034
READING
32.1
from The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
(1789) 1034
Robespierre and the Reign of Terror
1035
The Rights of Woman
1037
Olympe de
Gouges: The Call for Universal Rights
1037
READING
32.2
from
Olympe de
Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of
Woman and the Female Citizen
(1791) 103 7
Mary Wollstonecraft: An Englishwoman s Response to the
French Revolution
1038
READING 32.3a from Mary Wollstonecraft, Introduction to A Vindica¬
tion of the Rights of Woman
(1792) 1038
Napoleon and Neoclassical Paris
1038
The Consulate and the Napoleonic Empire:
1799-1814 1038
Art as Propaganda: Painting, Architecture,
Sculpture
1041
Reading
READING
32.3
from Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of
Woman
(1792) 1044
FOCUS David s The Uctors Returning to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons
1028
CULTURAL PARALLELS Napoleon s Influence in Egypt
1039
VOICES The Perils of the Parisian Streets
1043
Neoclassicism and Romanticism
1047
Index Index-
1
Photo and Text Credits Credits-
1
Continuity
&
Change
|
adam_txt |
Series
Contents
Book 1
The Ancient World and the Classical Past:
Prehistory to
200
ce
1
From Forest to Farm: The Rise of Culture
2
Mesopotamia: Power and Social Order in the Fertile
Crescent
3
The Stability of Ancient Egypt: Flood
and Sun
4
China, India, and Africa: Early Civilizations
5
Bronze Age Culture in the Aegean World:
The Great Traders
6
The Rise of Greek City-States:
War and Victory
7
Golden Age Athens: The School of Hellas
S
Rome: Urban Life and Imperial Majesty
Book
2
Medieval Europe and the Shaping of World
Cultures:
200
CE
to
1400
9
The Late Roman Empire, Judaism, and the Rise of
Christianity: Power and Faith
) Ö
Byzantium: Constantinople and the Byzantine
Empire
11
The Rise and Spread of Islam:
A New Religion
X2 Fiefdom and Monastery: The Merging
of Germanic and Roman Cultures
13
The Romanesque Tradition: Pilgrimage and
Crusade
í
4
The Gothic Style: Faith and Knowledge in an Age of
Inquiry
15
Siena and Florence in the Fourteenth Century:
Toward a New Humanism
16
China, India, Japan, Africa, and the Americas
before
1400
Book
3
The Renaissance and the Age of Encounter:
1400
to
1600
17
Florence and the Early Renaissance: Humanism in
Italy
ÎS
The High Renaissance in Rome: Papal Patronage
13
The Venetian Renaissance: Palace and Lagoon
20
The Renaissance in the North: Between Wealth
and Want
21
The Reformation: A New Church and the
Arts
22
The Early Counter-Reformation and Mannerism:
Restraint and Invention
23
The Age of Encounter: West Africa, China,
and Japan
24
England in the Tudor Age: "This Other
Eden"
Book
4
Excess, Inquiry, and Restraint:
1600
to
1800
25
The Baroque in Italy: The Church and Its Appeal
26
The Secular Baroque in the North: The Art of
Observation
27
The Baroque Court: Absolute Power and Royal
Patronage
2(8
The Rise of the Enlightenment in England: The
Claims of Reason
29
The Rococo and the Enlightenment on the
Continent: Privilege and Reason
30
Cross-Cultural Encounter: Exploration and Trade
in the Enlightenment
31
The Rights of Man: Revolution in America
32
A Culture of Change in France: Neoclassicism and
Revolution
Book
5
Romanticism, Realism, and
Empire:
1800
to
1900
33
The Self in Nature: The Rise of Romanticism
34
A Darker World: Napoleon and the Romantic
Imagination
35
Industry and the Working Class:
A New Realism
36
Revolution and Civil War: The Conditions of
Modern Life
37
The Rise of Bourgeois Culture: Living the Good
Life
38
The Gilded Age in America: Expansion and
Conflict
39
Global Confrontations: The Challenge to Cultural
Identity
40
From Realism to Symbolism: The
Fin de Siècle
Book
6
Modernism and the Globalization of Cultures:
1900
to the Present
41
The Era of Invention: Paris and the Rise
of Modernism
42
The Great War and Its Impact: A Lost Generation
43
New York and Skyscraper Culture:
Making it New
44
Between the Wars: The Age of Anxiety
45
World War II and Its Aftermath: Devastation and
Recovery
4S The Turbulent
1960s:
Decade of Change
47
The Postmodern Era: Multiple Meanings in a
Changing World
48
Blurring The Boundaries: The Global Village
in the Information Age
III
Contents
Preface
vu
Excess, Inquiry, and Restraint:
1600
to
1800 801
s'. The Baroque in Italy
The Church and Its Appeal
805
Baroque Style and the Counter-Reformation
808
Sculpture and Architecture: Bernini and His Followers
809
READING
25.1
from Teresa of
Ávila,
"Visions," Chapter
29
of The Life
of Teresa ofkvua (before
1567) 810
The Drama of Painting: Caravaggio and the
Caravaggisti
815
Master of Light and Dark: Caravaggio
815
READING
25.2
John Donne, "Batter My Heart"
(1618) 817
Elisabetta
Sirani
and Artemisia
Gentileschi:
Caravaggisti
Women
817
Ceiling Painting: The Illusion of Heaven
819
READING
25.4
from Ignatius Loyola, Spiritual Exercises, Fifth Exercise
(1548) 822
Venice and Baroque Music
822
Giovanni
Gabrieli
and the Drama of Harmony
822
Claudio
Monteverdi and the Birth of Opera
823
READING
25.5
from
Giulio Caccini,
New Worh of Music
(1602) 824
Arcangelo Corelli
and the Sonata
825
Antonio Vivaldi and the Concerto
826
Reading
READING
25.3
John Donne, "The Flea"
(1633) 828
í
MATERIALS AND TECNIQUES The Facade from Renaissance to
| Baroque
814
j
FOCUS Caravaggio's The Supper at Emmaus
820
CULTURAL PARALLELS Large-Scale Paintings in Rome and Japan
822
VOICES
Claudio
Monteverdi Appeals for His Salary
824
CULTURAL PARALLELS Virtuosity in Venice and Amsterdam
825
Continuity
Ss
Change The End of Italian Ascendency
831
The Secular Baroque in the
North
The Art of Observation
833
Calvinist
Amsterdam: City of Contradictions
835
Gaining Independence from Spain
836
Tulipomania
836
The Dutch Reformed Church: Strict Doctrine and White'
washed Spaces
838
iv
The Science of Observation
839
Francis Bacon and the Empirical Method
839
René
Descartes and the Deductive Method
839
READING
26.2
from
René
Descartes, Meditations
(1641) 840
Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, and the Telescope
840
Antoni
van Leeuwenhoek, Robert Hooke, and the
Microscope
842
Dutch Vernacular Painting: Art of the Familiar
842
New Imagery: Still Life, Landscape, and Genre
Painting
842
Johannes
Vermeer
and Domestic Interiors
846
Frans Hals
and the Group Portrait
848
Rembrandt van
Rijn
and the Drama of Light
848
The Baroque Keyboard
854
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck's Fantasies for the Organ
854
The North German School:
Johann
Sebastian Bach
854
Readings
READING
26.1
from Francis Bacon,
Novum Organum Scientiarum,
(The New Method of Science)
( 1620) 857
READING
26.3
from
René
Descartes, Discourse on Method (Part IV)
(1637) 858
CpiřCWV- F'-./V;4)?UiH
CULTURAL PARALLELS Scientific Inquiry in Northern Europe
and China
841
FOCUS Rembrandt's The Anatomy Lesson of Dr.
Тиф
852
setry
Continuity
&
Change Tensjon between
pijace
and Court 861
°У"/І
The Baroque Court
Absolute Power and Royal
Patronage
863
Versailles and the Rise of Absolutism
864
The Arts of the French Court
869
The Painting of Peter Paul Rubens: Color and
Sensuality
869
The Painting of Nicolas
Poussin:
Classical Decorum
872
Music and Dance at the Court of Louis
XIV 873
Theater at the French Court
874
READING 27.1a from
Molière, Tartuffe,
Act V
(1664) 875
The Art and Politics of the English Court
876
Anthony van Dyck: Court Painter
877
Portraiture in the American Colonies
878
Puritan and Cavalier Literature
878
READING 27.2a Anne Bradstreet, "To My Dear and Loving Husband"
(1667) 879
READING
27.3
Robert
Herrick,
"To the Virgins, To Make Much
of Time"
(1648) 879
Henry
Purceii
and English Opera
880
CONTENTS
The Arts of the Spanish Court
880
Diego Velazquez and the Royal Portrait
880
The Literature of the Spanish Court
884
The Baroque in the Americas
885
The
Cuzco
School
885
Baroque Music in the Americas:
Sor Juana Inés
de la
Cruz
Continuity
g,
Change
READING
27.4
Sor Juana Inés de la
Cruz, "To Her Self-Portrait"
(posthumous publication
1700) 887
The Churrigueresque Style:
Retablos
and Portals in New
Spain
887
Readings
READING
27.1
from
Molière, Tartuffe,
Act III, scenes
2
and
3 (1664) 890
READING
27.2
Anne Bradstreet, "Here Follows Some Verses upon the
Burning of Our House, July 10th,
1666" (1667) 892
Special Features
VOICES Life for the Other French
867
CULTURAL PARALLELS A Shogun's Power in Japan
868
CULTURAL PARALLELS
Kabuki
Theater in Japan
880
FOCUS Velazquez's
Las Meninas
882
Excess and Restraint
895
°2) ^J
The Rise of the Enlighten«
ment
in England
The Claims of Reason
897
The New London: Toward the Enlightenment
900
READING
28.1
from John Dryden,
"Annus
Mirabilis,"
1667 900
Absolutism Versus Liberalism: Thomas Hobbes and
John Locke
901
READING
28.3
from Locke's
Essa?
on Human Understanding
( 1690) 904
John Milton's Paradise Lost
904
READING
гв-ба-Ь
from John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book
5 (1667) 905
The English Enlightenment
905
Satire: Enlightenment Wit
906
READING
28.7
from Jonathan Swift,
Guüwer's
Travels, Book IV,
Chapter VI
(1726) 909
READING
28.8
from Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man
( 1732) 909
Isaac Newton: The Laws of Physics
910
The Industrial Revolution
910
Handel and the English Oratorio
913
Literacy and the New Print Culture
913
The
Tarier
and The Spectator
913
READING
28.9
from Joseph Addison, Trie Spectator, No.
10,
Monday,
March
12, 1711 915
The Rise of the English Novel
915
READING
28.10
from Samuel Richardson's Pamela
(1740) 916
READING
28.11
from Henry Fielding, Shameh
(1741) 917
READING 28.12a from Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice,
Chapter
1 (1813) 917
READING 28.12b from Jane Austen, Pride and
Prejuäce,
Chapter
43 (1813) 918
READING
28.13
from Samuel Johnson, The Rambler, No.
4,
Saturday,
March
31,1750 919
Readings
READING
28.2
from Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan
(1651) 920
READING
28.4
from John Locke, The Second Treatise of Government
(1690) 922
READING
28.5
from John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book
6,
(1667) 923
READING
28.6
from Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal
(1729) 925
Special
Fkatukís
CULTURAL PARALLELS Growth and Commerce in London and
China
900
FOCUS Christopher Wren's Saint Paul's Cathedral
902
CULTURAL PARALLELS Crisis in Holland
904
VOICES Rules for Behaviour in Company
914
Continuity grange signboard of a New World
931
V)
(ci)
The Rococo and the Enlighten¬
ment on the Continent
Privilege and Reason
933
The Rococo
936
Rococo Painting in France: The
Fête Galante
and the Art
of Love
937
Rococo Architecture and Landscape Design in Central
Europe and England
940
The
Philosophes
946
Denis Diderot and the
Encycbpédie
946
READING
29.1
from "Law of Nature or Natural Law," from the
Encyclopédie
(1751-1772) 947
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Cost of the Social
Contract
948
READING
29.3
from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract, Book
1,
Chapter
4
("Slavery")
(1762) 948
READING
29.4
from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin
of Inequality among Men
(1755) 949
Voltaire and French Satire
949
Art Criticism and Theory
950
Rococo and Classical Music
952
The Symphonic Orchestra
952
Symphonic Form
953
The String Quartets of Joseph Haydn
955
Wolfgang
Amadeus
Mozart: Music to Chew On
955
The Popularization of Opera
956
Readings
READING
29.2
from Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Confessions, Book
1
(completed
1770,
published
1780) 961
READING
29.5
from Voltaire,
Candide
(1758) 962
Special Features
CULTURAL PARALLELS Gardens in England and Japan
944
FOCUS Mozart's Symphony No.
40
in
G
Minor (K.
550),
First
Movement: Moito Aliegro
958
^4
Continuity
g.
Change The End of the Rococo
967
VI
CONTENTS
;) ((")) Cross-Cultural
Encounter
Exploration and Trade in the
Enlightenment
969
The South Pacific: The Cultures Captain Cook
Encountered
971
Polynesia
971
Melanesia
974
Australia
975
China and Europe: Cross-Cultural Contact
976
The Arts in the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911) 977
Celebrating Tradition: The Great Jade Carving
980
India and Europe: Cross-Cultural Connections
982
Islamic India: The Taste for Western Art
982
Mogul Architecture: The Taj Mahal
983
READING
30.1
Shah Jahan, inscription on the Taj Mahal,
ca.
1658 984
Native American Traditions
986
The Pueblo Cultures of New Spain
986
Weaving and Basketry
986
The Northeast Woodlands Tribes
Reading
READING
30.2
Logan, Speech at the End of Lord Dunmore's War, from
Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia
(1784) 992
.
VOICES James Cook Interprets Tahitian Behavior
972
!
CULTURAL PARALLELS The Voyages of Captain Cook on French
Wallpaper
973
FOCUS Europe's
Chinoiserie
Craze
978
CULTURAL PARALLELS Two Islamic Rulers
985
Continuity
&
Change The Growing Crisis of the Slave Trade
995
The Rights of Man
Revolution in America
997
The American Revolution
998
The Road to Revolt: War and Taxation
999
The Declaration of Independence
1000
READING
31.1
from The Declaration of Independence
(1776) 1001
Neoclassicism in Britain and America
1001
The British Influence: Robert Adam and Josiah
Wedgwood
1003
American Neoclassical Architecture
1004
Neoclassical Sculpture in America
1006
The Issue of Slavery
1008
Autobiographical and Fictional Accounts of Slavery
1008
READING 31.3a from Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative
of the Life
ofOfóndah
Equiano, or Gustavus
Vassa
the
African
(П89)
1009
READING
31.4
Phyllis Wheatley, '"Twas mercy brought me from my
Pagan land"
(1773) 1011
The Economic Argument for Slavery and Revolution:
Free Trade
1014
The Abolitionist Movement in Britain and
America
1014
The African Diaspora
1015
Readings
READING
31.2
James Madison, Federalist No.
10 (1787) 1016
READING
31.3
from The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah
Equiano
(1789) 1017
READING
31.5
from Aphra Behn, Oroonoko, or The Royal Slave
( 1688)
1019
VOICES Former Slaves Petition for Tax Relief
1009
CULTURAL PARALLELS The Dream of Freedom
1011
FOCUS Blake's "The Little Black Boy" and "The Chimney Sweeper"
1012
Continuity
&
Change The Rise of Neoclassicism in France
1021
^
-[л
A Culture of Change in France
Neoclassicism and Revolution
1023
Jacques-Louis David and the Neoclassical Style
1026
Three Paintings of
1787 1030
Angelica Kauffmann and Neoclassical Motherhood
1032
The French Revolution
1032
The Estates General of
1789
and the National Assembly
1032
The Great Fear and the October Days
1034
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the
Constitution of
1791 1034
READING
32.1
from The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
(1789) 1034
Robespierre and the Reign of Terror
1035
The Rights of Woman
1037
Olympe de
Gouges: The Call for Universal Rights
1037
READING
32.2
from
Olympe de
Gouges, Declaration of the Rights of
Woman and the Female Citizen
(1791) 103 7
Mary Wollstonecraft: An Englishwoman's Response to the
French Revolution
1038
READING 32.3a from Mary Wollstonecraft, Introduction to A Vindica¬
tion of the Rights of Woman
(1792) 1038
Napoleon and Neoclassical Paris
1038
The Consulate and the Napoleonic Empire:
1799-1814 1038
Art as Propaganda: Painting, Architecture,
Sculpture
1041
Reading
READING
32.3
from Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of
Woman
(1792) 1044
FOCUS David's The Uctors Returning to Brutus the Bodies of His Sons
1028
CULTURAL PARALLELS Napoleon's Influence in Egypt
1039
VOICES The Perils of the Parisian Streets
' 1043
Neoclassicism and Romanticism
1047
Index Index-
1
Photo and Text Credits Credits-
1
Continuity
&
Change |
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spelling | Sayre, Henry M. 1948- Verfasser (DE-588)153208953 aut The humanities culture, continuity & change 4 Excess, inquiry, and restraint : 1600 to 1800 Henry M. Sayre Upper Saddle River, NJ Pearson/Prentice Hall 2008 XV S., S. 801 - 1047 zahlr. Ill., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier (DE-604)BV022518678 4 Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016450125&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Sayre, Henry M. 1948- The humanities culture, continuity & change |
title | The humanities culture, continuity & change |
title_auth | The humanities culture, continuity & change |
title_exact_search | The humanities culture, continuity & change |
title_exact_search_txtP | The humanities culture, continuity & change |
title_full | The humanities culture, continuity & change 4 Excess, inquiry, and restraint : 1600 to 1800 Henry M. Sayre |
title_fullStr | The humanities culture, continuity & change 4 Excess, inquiry, and restraint : 1600 to 1800 Henry M. Sayre |
title_full_unstemmed | The humanities culture, continuity & change 4 Excess, inquiry, and restraint : 1600 to 1800 Henry M. Sayre |
title_short | The humanities |
title_sort | the humanities culture continuity change excess inquiry and restraint 1600 to 1800 |
title_sub | culture, continuity & change |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016450125&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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