Library Highlights Kit July - December 2021

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The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity Richard A. Etlin

University of Maryland, College Park

Description The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity offers a wide-ranging overview of one of the most important genres of Western architecture, from its origins in the Early Christian era to the present day. Including 103 essays, specially commissioned for this volume and written by an international team of scholars, the volume examines a range of themes and issues, including religious building types, siting, regional traditions, ornament, and structure. It also explores how designers and builders responded to the spiritual needs and cult practices of Christianity as they developed and evolved over the centuries. The volume is richly illustrated with 592 halftones and 70 color plates. Additional images, nearly all in color are available online and are keyed into the text. The most comprehensive and up-to date reference work on this topic, The Cambridge Guide to the Architecture of Christianity will serve as a primary reference resource for scholars, practitioners, and students.

Key Features • The most up to date and comprehensive overview of Christian architecture, East and West, from its origins in Late Antiquity up to the present day currently available • Explores the development of Christian architecture in tandem with the evolution of Christian liturgy and ritual practices over nearly two millenia • Written by an international team of top scholars

Contents Part I. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture: 1. Early Christian pilgrimage and sacred landscapes; 2. Domestic architecture and Christian worship in Late Antiquity; 3. Sacred space and sensory experience Late Antique churches; 4. The conversion of Pagan temples into churches in the Late Antique East; 5. Early Christian monasteries; 6. Early Christian baptisteries; 7. The early Christian churches of Palestine and Arabia; 8. Sacred space in Late Antique and Coptic Egypt; 9. Armenian churches of the seventh century; 10. Typology and scale in byzantine church architecture; 11. Byzantine builders: their crafts and materials; 12. Rite and passage in the medieval Byzantine church; 13. Ritual and authority in Hagia Sophia; 14. The Byzantine church beyond the liturgy; 15. Aesthetics and illumination of Byzantine church architecture; 16. Ekphrasis and symbolism in church architecture; 17. Place, time, and text in the monumental decoration of the middle Byzantine church; 18. Religion in the Byzantine countryside; 19. Patronage of Byzantine churches and monasteries; 20. Byzantine architecture and the monastic experience; 21. Burials and funerary chapels in Byzantium; 22. The architectural setting of pilgrimage in the Byzantine world: learning from Cyprus; 23. Cultural conflict and cultural synergies: crusaders, colonists, and Byzantine churches; 24. Islamicizing motifs in middle Byzantine church decoration; 25. Symbolism and ornament on Byzantine church exteriors, 900–1500; 26. Early Christian Georgian churches; 27. Medieval religious architecture in the Balkans; 28. Byzantine architecture in Italy;

Part II. Medieval Christian Architecture: 29. The legacy of the city of Rome to Christian architecture; 30. East and West in the early middle ages: Josef Strzygowski and the Orient oder Rom controversy; 31. Basilicas and centralized churches in the early middle ages; 32. Religious architecture in Gaul in the early middle ages; 33. Monastic Christian architecture; 34. Carolingian architecture; 35. Liturgy and architecture in the middle ages; 36. Christian pilgrimage and medieval architecture; 37. Anglo-Saxon church architecture; 38. The Year 1000 and the promise of a new millennium through church architecture; 39. The notion of Romanesque; 40. Romanesque architecture in its regional manifestations; 41. Early Gothic architecture; 42. Gothic and the medieval quadrivium; 43. The architectural metaphor in Western medieval artistic culture: from the cornerstone to the mystic ark; 44. High Gothic architecture in France, 1190–1240; 45. Gothic structure; 46. The Sainte-Chapelle and Paris as the heavenly Jerusalem; 47. Liturgical furnishings and material splendor in the Gothic church; 48. Regional Gothic in Burgundy; 49. Gothic church building in England; 50. Italian architecture in the high middle ages; 51. Spanish medieval architecture: European currents and regional solutions on the fringe of the Christian world; 52. Shared sacred spaces in the Holy Land; 53. Late Gothic architecture; 54. Gothic architecture and the waning of the middle ages; 55. Gothic towers and spires;


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Articles inside

Analytic Philosophy of Literature

1min
page 36

Philosophy of Language and Metaphor

2min
page 35

Negation and Denial

1min
page 32

Types and Definitions of Irony

1min
page 34

Deception: Lying and Beyond

1min
page 33

The Philosophy of Argument

1min
page 31

Contemporary Discourse Studies and Philosophy of Language Part VI. Some Extensions:

1min
page 30

Mental Files

1min
page 29

Conceptual Semantics and its Implications for Philosophy of Language

2min
page 27

Relevance Theory and the Philosophy of Language

1min
page 28

Slurs: Semantic and Pragmatic Theories of Meaning Part V. Philosophical Implications and Linguistic Theories:

2min
page 25

The Normativity of Meaning and Content

2min
page 23

Metasemantics: A Normative Perspective (and the Case of Mood

1min
page 22

Propositions, Predication, and Assertion

2min
page 19

Entailment, Presupposition, Implicature; 18. Speech Acts, Actions, and Events

4min
pages 17-18

Vagueness in Natural Language Part IV. Issues in Semantics and Pragmatics:

3min
page 16

Natural Kind Terms

3min
page 15

Indexicals and Contextual Involvement

3min
page 14

Semantic Minimalism and Contextualism in Light of the Logicality of Language Part III. From Truth to Vagueness:

2min
page 10

Truth and Theories of Truth

1min
page 11

Names in Philosophy

2min
page 13

Philosophy of Language, Ontology and Logic

3min
page 5

Reference and Theories of Reference

2min
page 12

Metasemantics and Metapragmatics: Philosophical Foundations of Meaning

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page 7

Semantic Content and Utterance Context: A Spectrum of Approaches

1min
page 9

Frege’s Legacy in the Philosophy of Language and Mind

1min
page 6
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