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Autor(en):
Medium: Fachartikel
Sprache(n): Englisch
Veröffentlicht in: Architectural History, , v. 57
Seite(n): 73-108
DOI: 10.1017/s0066622x00001386
Abstrakt:

‘Remember the impression one gets from good architecture, that it expresses a thought.' Wittgenstein's prompt to himself comes to mind when, in looking at Elizabethan buildings today accepted as ‘good architecture', we ask, but what is the thought? The thinking behind prodigy houses and their lodges is not easy to discern; it has to be addressed indirectly because the Elizabethans left no statements about their architectural intentions. But it is useful to look at discourses adjacent to architecture. Of these, rhetoric, the ancient art of persuasion, is one of the most significant. ‘Rhetoric and architecture', writes the historian of memory, Mary Carruthers, ‘have had a venerable dialogue'. This essay argues that such a dialogue exists in the minds of the Elizabethan patron-builders, at various levels of consciousness. New ideas meet with, and in turn are shaped by, an education in which rhetoric has played a significant role.

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Structurae kann Ihnen derzeit diese Veröffentlichung nicht im Volltext zur Verfügung stellen. Der Volltext ist beim Verlag erhältlich über die DOI: 10.1017/s0066622x00001386.
  • Über diese
    Datenseite
  • Reference-ID
    10307712
  • Veröffentlicht am:
    01.03.2019
  • Geändert am:
    01.03.2019
 
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