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English Pages [646] Year 1986 and 1987
Vol. 1, No,
1
Spring, 1986
EMBLEMATICA Virtua fortuna comes ?
An Interdisciplinary Journal for Emblem Studies AMS PRESS
EMBLEMATICA
An Interdisciplinary Journal for Emblem Studies Spring,
1986
Editors Peter M. Daly Daniel Russell
AMS
Press,
Inc.
New York
EMBELEMATICA ISSN
0885 968X
Manuscripts and books for review may be sent to etther editor, however, no
obligation
1s recognized
to review or return
any
book
received.
Articles and
essays should conform to the guidelines published in the MLA Handbook for Writers (1977 edition); authors should submit their work in duplicate and
will be expected
to provide
high-quality
glossy
prints of any
tllustrations to
be published with their work. Submissions should be accompanied by return postage. Subscriptions and remittances should be sent to the publisher, AMS
Press, 56 East 13th Street, New York, NY 10003 U.S. A. The annual subscription rate for institutions is $55.00 and for individuals $30.00. Subscribers outside the United States please add $5.00 for surface delivery
and $10.00 for air mail. New York residents add appropriate sales tax.
Copyright © AMS Press, Inc., All rights reserved.
1986
Manufactured in the United States of America
EMBLEMATICA
An Interdisciplinary Journal for Emblem Studies is published twice a year, in the spring and fall. Kmblematica publishes original articles, essays, and specialized bibliographies in all areas
of emblem
studies.
In addition
it will contain
review
articles,
reviews, research reports (work in progress, including theses, conference feports and abstracts of completed theses), notes and queries, notices (forthcoming conferences and publications), and various types of documentation.
Editors Peter M. Daly
Daniel S. Russell
McGill University Department of German 1001 Sherbrooke Street W. Montreal, PQ Canada H3A
Department of French and Italian University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA 15260 U.S. A.
1G5
Advisory Board Jan Bialostocki
John Rupert Martin
Barbara C. Bowen
Karel Porteman
Warsaw
University
of Illinois,
Princeton University
Urbana-
Champaign August Buck
Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven
Thomas P. Roche, Jr. Princeton University
Marburg and Wolfenbiittel Wolfgang Harms
John M. Steadman University of California, Riverside
Munich
J.B. Trapp
The Warburg Institute, London
Editorial Board Virginia W. Callahan
Agnes Sherman
Pedro F. Campa
Egon Verheyen
Howard University, emerita University of Tennessee, nooga
Bernhard F. Scholz Ruksunwversiteit Utrecht
Chatta-
Princeton University The Johns Hopkins University
Alan Young Acadia University
EMBLEMATICA AnInternational Journal of Emblem Studies
Volume 1, Number 1
Spring, 1986
Preface
Xi
Articles
John Manning Continental Emblem Books in Sixteenth-Century England: The Evidence of Sloane MS. 3794
1
Michael Bath Weeping Stags and Melancholy Lovers: The Iconography of As You Like It, U, 1
13
Mason Tung From Natural History to Emblem: A Study of Peacham9s Use of Camerarius9s Symbola et Emblemata
53
Documentation Daniel Russell Two Seventeenth-Century French Treatises
on the Art of the Device
79
Bibliography Alan R. Young
Facsimiles, Microform Reproductions,
and Modern Editions of Emblem Books
109
Review
and Criticism
Peter M. Daly Directions in Emblem Research 4 Past and Present
159
Reviews
M. T. Jones-Davies, ed., Emblémes et devises au temps de
la
Renaissance, by Barbara C. Bowen
F. W.G. Leeman, Alciatus9
Emblemata.
voorbeelden, by Bernhard F. Scholz
Denkbeelden en
P.C. Hooft, et al., Emblemata amatoria, ed. Karel Porteman,
by Lia van Gemert
175 178 185
Research Reports, Notes, Queries, and Notices
Research Reports William S. Heckscher and Agnes B. Sherman
The Emblem Project at the Princeton University Library
Thomas McGeary and N. Frederick Nash The Emblem Book Cataloguing Project at the University of Illinois
G. Richard Dimler, S. J.
191
194
The Jesuit Emblem Handbook: A Report 198 Peter M. Daly and Alan R. Young The German Diary of Johann Georg Dehn-Rotfelser (1611): A Unique Source of Information on English Impresas 205 Notes and Queries John Manning Alciati and Philostratus9s Icones Queries and Notices
Forthcoming Conferences
207 211 212
Preface The group of scholars who constitute the editorial board of Emblematica has established this new journal to fill several perceived needs.
readers journals emblem have in
First, we have
all experienced,
as we
are sure many
of our
have too, the difficulty of publishing work on emblems in that are operated along strictly disciplinary lines. Second, studies are currently receiving more attention than they ever the past. Not only is interest growing rapidly in the emblem
and its role in Renaissance culture, but emblem
studies are also un-
dergoing a change in direction as scholars begin to use the tools of semiotics and other new critical methodologies to analyze the emblem or use emblem literature in explaining structures larger than an isolated image or iconographical motif. Finally, perhaps the most important reason for creating a journal of this sort is the clear need for some kind of clearinghouse for bibliographical updating, notes and queries in a field that is so poorly known and so vast in its interdisciplinary and intercultural ramifications. Emblems have no disciplinary home; so while it is easy to discover what has been written about Luther, or Montaigne, or Breughel9s engravings, it is much less so to discover
what has been written about Italian emblems or emblem theory.
To help scholars overcome the problems peculiar to emblem studies
in the most efficient way possible, we have, then, created
Emblema-
tica to serve as a forum for researchers working in the field, and as a clearinghouse for information about progress and problems in em-
blem studies. To that end, we will be publishing, in addition to essays, various kinds of documentation, reviews and review articles, bib-
liography, notes and queries, research and conference reports, and notices of forthcoming conferences and publications. In the area of bibliography, especially, we hope to create a sharper picture of the field by providing more complete listings of emblem hooks, both printed and manuscript, more detailed descriptions of editions, and better indications of their location than have heretofore been available, and to the same end, we also intend to build upon the work of Henkel and Schone in the area of secondary bibliography. Emblematica will be open to studies originating in any of the humanistic disciplines 4 literary studies, art history, intellectual history, etc.4and to studies utilizing any critical approach or method-
EMIBLEMATICA
ology with rigor.
The determining criterion in our selection of articles
for publication will be their contribution to the better understanding
of the field or some part of it. For the enterprise to be a success, that is, for the journal to be truly
useful to anyone working with emblems, we shall need the support of all scholars working with emblems. This support should take the form of all sorts of submissions: articles, notes and queries, and short,
unpublished
or little known,
bibliographical
discoveries
and
pieces
of documentation
suggestions
for reviews
as well
as
or review
articles. Support should also take the form of subscriptions either by yourselves or by the libraries you work in; it is especially important
that you urge your library to subscribe to Emblematica. By working together, we should be able to avoid duplicating work already done, or currently being done by colleagues, and make progress in the field
come more rapidly. a success.
If that does happen,
Emblematica will have been
TE HE SE IE OK I 2H A Ee He OE EE OK OK OK
The publication of this inaugural issue of Emblematica would not have been possible without the help and support of many colleagues and institutions.
First, the editors would like to thank certain facul-
ties of their home institutions: the Faculties Studies and Research at McGill University, and Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh support as well as various sorts of support in
of Arts and of Graduate and the Faculty of Arts for basic administrative kind for the preparation
of this first issue. At the University of Pittsburgh, where cameraready copy was computer-processed on a Xerox 8010 system, the editors are especially grateful to Prof. Michael Spring of the Interdisciplinary Department of Information Science and Prof. Bruce Stiehm,
editor of Hispanic Linguistics, for their patient guidance in the preparation of our formatting protocols within the context of Prof. Spring9s
electronic publishing project under the Xerox University Grants Program. Finally, our work would have been more arduous without the
help of colleagues and students who have entered the text and done much of the proofreading; among them, we would like especially to thank Catharine Randall of the University of Pittsburgh. PMD DR
Continental Emblem
Books in
Sixteenth-Century England:
The Evidence of Sloane MS. 3794 JOHN
MANNING
The Queen9s University of Belfast
Thomas Palmer9s emblematic manuscript, Two hundred poosees (British Library Sloane MS. 3794) is probably the first emblem book in English.! The manuscript is dedicated to