img Leseprobe Leseprobe

The paradox of body, building and motion in seventeenth-century England

Kimberley Skelton

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Manchester University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Kunst

Beschreibung

This book examines how seventeenth-century English architectural theorists and designers rethought the domestic built environment in terms of mobility, as motion became a dominant mode of articulating the world across discourses encompassing philosophy, political theory, poetry, and geography. From mid-century, the house and estate that had evoked staccato rhythms became triggers for mental and physical motion – evoking travel beyond England’s shores, displaying vistas, and showcasing changeable wall surfaces. Simultaneously, philosophers and other authors argued for the first time that, paradoxically, the blur of motion immobilised an inherently restless viewer into social predictability and so stability. Alternately feared and praised early in the century for its unsettling unpredictability, motion became the most certain way of comprehending social interactions, language, time, and the buildings that filtered human experience. At the heart of this narrative is the malleable sensory viewer, tacitly assumed in early modern architectural theory and history yet whose inescapable responsiveness to surrounding stimuli guaranteed a dependable world from the seventeenth century.

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Schlagwörter

social divisions, vistas, changeable garden, modern architectural theory, philosophy, human experience, mobile wall surface, pause, political theory, staccato rhythms, domestic built environment, Heinrich Wolfflin, mobility, poetry, English architectural theorists, ideal harmony, geography, seventeenth-century England, social interactions