Skin and the Search for the Interior: The Representation of Flaying in the Art and Anatomy of the Cinquecento
Few people in the sixteenth century would have seen a living, skinned body. The instance of Venetian commander Marcantonio Bragadin being flayed by Turkish troops was an isolated case, which provoked horror2 – but pictures of what such a thing looked like came to be widely disseminated. From the mid...
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Published in | Bodily Extremities pp. 20 - 57 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
United Kingdom
Routledge
2003
Taylor & Francis Group |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 0754607267 9780754607267 |
DOI | 10.4324/9781315261447-8 |
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Summary: | Few people in the sixteenth century would have seen a living, skinned
body. The instance of Venetian commander Marcantonio Bragadin
being flayed by Turkish troops was an isolated case, which provoked
horror2 – but pictures of what such a thing looked like came to be widely
disseminated. From the mid-sixteenth century, pictorial art featured
more and more representations of flayed bodies. These were usually
either the silen Marsyas flayed by Apollo, or St Bartholomew, but many* Parts of this text were presented at the conference ‘Körpermarken – Bildermarken’
under the auspices of the VW-Nachwuchsgruppe ‘Kulturgeschichte und Theologie des
Bildes im Christentum’. The subsequent discussion was very stimulating for which I am
thankful, in particular I would like to thank Mechthild Fend for our continuous exchange
on the subject of skin. I am also grateful to Marianne Koos and Daniela Hacke for reading
earlier versions of the article and their pertinent contribution discussing the question of the
historical conception of identity. |
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ISBN: | 0754607267 9780754607267 |
DOI: | 10.4324/9781315261447-8 |