Seeing in Imagination: Visual Representation and Spiritual Contemplation in the Ascetical Treatises of Juan Eusebio Nieremberg

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Abstract

The once famous Spanish Jesuit Juan Eusebio Nieremberg engages the readers of his ascetical treatises De la diferencia entre lo temporal y eterno (1640) and De la hermosura de Dios (1641) in seeing in their imagination a seemly contradictory set of images of the material world: one in contempt, the other in wonder. However, the images serve the same purpose of fostering a greater appreciation for the eternal. This paper examines how Nieremberg’s visually descriptive narrative relates to the ways in which painters of the Spanish Golden Age –Valdés Leal, Sánchez Cotán and Murillo– display items on their canvases, but also explores its connection to the method of imaginative contemplation, specifically the “composition of place,” in the Spiritual Exercises (1548) of Ignatius Loyola. In doing so, this paper shows how visual representation, both textual and pictorial, related to Jesuit spiritual and pedagogical practices in seventeenth-century Spain.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalModern Languages and Literatures: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Volume2
Issue number2
StatePublished - Jan 1 2017

Keywords

  • Spanish Jesuit
  • Juan Eusebio Nieremberg
  • Material World
  • Golden Age
  • St. Ignatius
  • Seventeenth-Century Spain

Disciplines

  • Modern Languages
  • Modern Literature

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