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9780195117745

Invisible City The Architecture of Devotion in Seventeenth-Century Neapolitan Convents

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780195117745

  • ISBN10:

    0195117743

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2004-01-25
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

More than any other European city, Baroque Naples was dominated by convents. Behind their imposing facades and highly decorated churches, the convents of Naples housed the daughters of the city's most exclusive families, women who, despite their cloistered existence, were formidable players in the city's power structure. Invisible City vividly portrays the religious world of seventeenth-century Naples, a city of familial and internecine rivalries, of religious devotion and intense urban politics, of towering structures built to house the virgin daughters of the aristocracy. Helen Hills demonstrates how the architecture of the convents and the nuns' bodies they housed existed both in parallel and in opposition to one another. She discusses these women as subjects of enclosure, as religious women, and as art patrons, but also as powerful agents whose influence extended beyond the convent walls. Though often ensconced in convents owing to their families' economic circumstances, many of these young women were able to extend their influence as a result of the role convents played both in urban life and in art patronage. The convents were rich and powerful organizations, riven with feuds and prey to the ambitions of viceregal and elite groups, which their thick walls could not exclude. Even today, Neapolitan convents figure prominently in the city's fabric. In analyzing the architecture of these august institutions, Helen Hills skillfully reads conventual architecture as a metaphor for the body of the aristocratic virgin nun, mapping out the dialectic between flesh and stone.

Author Biography


Helen Hills is Reader in History of Art at the University of York. She is the author of (Inlaid Polychromatic Marble Decoration in Early Modern Sicily: Invention and Identity and the editor of Architecture and the Politics of Gender in Early Modern Europe.

Table of Contents

Introduction Convents and Conventual Life in Early Modern Italy 3(16)
Cittadelle sacre and the Politics of Conventual Urbanism
19(26)
Virginity and Enclosure
45(17)
Dowries and Daughters
62(28)
Living Like Ladies: Conventual Patronage
90(30)
Convents and Conflict: Conventual Urbanism in Naples
120(19)
Conventual Optics of Power
139(22)
Conclusion Conventual Architecture as Metaphor for the Body 161(22)
Notes 183(46)
Glossary 229(2)
Bibliography 231(22)
Index 253

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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