CMEMS: Bernardo Hinojosa (°®åú´«Ã½) presents: "A World in Motion: Physics, Rhetoric, and the Medieval Art of Description"
Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages
450 Jane °®åú´«Ã½ Way, Building 260, °®åú´«Ã½, CA 94305
252
Organized and hosted by the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (CMEMS).
Bernardo Hinojosa (°®åú´«Ã½) will give a talk titled "A World in Motion: Physics, Rhetoric, and the Medieval Art of Description"
As they offer readers imitable models for their own rhetorical and poetic compositions, Bernard Silvester’s Cosmographia (c.1145-47) and Geoffrey of Vinsauf’s Poetria Nova (c.1208-13) develop a theory and practice of description that, rather than suspend its object in time, enables the imaginative rehearsal of a material world in flux. Reflecting the growing currency of Aristotelian ideas and texts in the period, this mode of literary description illustrates the central premise of Aristotelian physics: that the causal relations of the changing sublunary world can be pictured and thus subjected to analysis and rationalization.
The CMEMS Workshop series meets most Wednesdays during the academic year. Lunch is provided. See the CMEMS website for the list of .