Money Matters in European Artworks and Literature, c. 1400-1750

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A32=Allison Stielau
A32=Angela Ho
A32=Carrie Anderson
A32=Heather G.S. Johnson
A32=Jessica Stewart
A32=Rana Choi
A32=Roger Crum
A32=Sebastian Felten
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art
automatic-update
B01=Joanna Woodall
B01=Natasha Seaman
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AGP
Category=DSBD
Category=HBJD
Category=HBLH
Category=NHD
coins
COP=Netherlands
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eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Language_English
literature
mints
money
PA=Not available (reason unspecified)
Price_€100 and above
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Product details

  • ISBN 9789463726078
  • Weight: 960g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2022
  • Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
  • Publication City/Country: NL
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Natasha Seaman is Professor of Art History at Rhode Island College. She is the author of Hendrick ter Brugghen and the Theology of the Image. Reinventing Painting after the Reformation in Utrecht (Ashgate 2012) and several articles relating to the work of the Utrecht Caravaggisti. Joanna Woodall is Professor of Art History at The Courtauld Institute of Art. She specialises in Netherlandish visual culture during the age of global expansion. Her recent publications have focused on love and money, and sometimes the exchange between the two. Sebastian Felten (PhD, King’s College London) is a historian of finance, science, and bureaucracy in early modern Europe. His current focus is on money as a social technology and knowledge work in early modern mining. Jessica Stewart (PhD, UC Berkeley) works on the history of collecting and the intellectual cultures of reception. Her research focuses primarily on the visual cultures of international trade in the early modern world. She serves as the Director of the Office of Undergraduate Research and Scholarships at UC Berkeley. Angela Ho is Associate Professor at George Mason University and the author of Creating Distinctions in Dutch Genre Painting: Repetition and Invention (2017). Her current research focuses on the economic and artistic exchanges between the Dutch East India Company and various Chinese groups in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Carrie Anderson is an Associate Professor of Art History at Middlebury College in Vermont. Her primary area of research is the art of the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic, within which she focuses on themes related to intra- and intercultural diplomacy and gift exchange. Rana Choi is currently working on turning her dissertation, Erich Auerbach and His Interlocutors: A Comparison of Literary Critical Methodologies, into a book, as well as a second book that is an application of these methodological insights in Shakespearean Figurations. Heather Johnson is an associate professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and teaches early modern literature, literary theory, and writing pedagogy and practice. Her research interests include early modern religious and political writing, early modern women writers, affect theory, and pedagogy. Allison Stielau is Lecturer in Early Modern Art at University College London. Her research focuses on object cultures in early modern northern Europe. Roger J. Crum is Professor of Art History at the University of Dayton. Formerly President of the Italian Art Society and a Board member of the College Art Association, Crum has been a Member at the Institute for Advanced Study and a Visiting Professor at Harvard University’s Villa I Tatti. Dalia Judovitz is National Endowment for the Humanities Professor Emerita of French at Emory University.Her particular interests are subjectivity, representation, and art in the early modern period, and modern aesthetics. The most recent of her six books is Georges de La Tour and the Enigma of the Visible (2018).