Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary

abstract: The medieval bestiary is often simply described as a moralized "encyclopedia of animals," however, these so-called "books of beasts" were made for humans, by humans, about humans. It is therefore surprising that one common pictorial subject of the bestiary has been left...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Anderson, Susan Poole (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25095
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-25095
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-250952018-06-22T03:05:11Z Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary abstract: The medieval bestiary is often simply described as a moralized "encyclopedia of animals," however, these so-called "books of beasts" were made for humans, by humans, about humans. It is therefore surprising that one common pictorial subject of the bestiary has been left unexamined: humans. By viewing bestiary images through this lens, one may easily see man's underlying and unresolved struggle to maintain dominance over the beasts, and the Others projected onto them, thereby ensuring that "the (hu)man" remains a discrete definition. This study begins as the bestiary does, with the Naming of the Animals. Illustrations of Adam as a king, bestowing names of his choosing upon tame beasts express a kind of nostalgia for a now-lost time when humanity was secure in their identity as non-animal. This security no longer exists in the postlapsarian world, nor in the bestiary images following these scenes. In an attempt to maintain the illusion of dominion, many bestiary illuminations forego simple descriptive images in favor of gory hunting scenes. However, these conspicuous declarations of dominion only serve to highlight the fragility of the physical form, and even demonstrate the frailty of the human (male, Christian) identity. One such example is MS Bodley 764's boar illumination, in which the animal is killed at the hands of male hunters. This thesis unpacks this image of dominion in order to reveal the associated insecurities regarding race, gender, and species that lie beneath the surface. Subsequently, the study turns to the many bestiary images depicting human bodies brutally fragmented within the jaws of an animal. Anthropophagous bestiary animals often carry fears of the gender and ethnic Other; despite the bestiary's posturing of order and hierarchy, both the human body and identity are easily consumed and subsumed into the ever-present animal/Other. Just as in life, the human figures in the bestiary struggle to establish unquestioned dominion, only to be constantly undercut by the abject. By using a psychoanalytic approach to the human bodies of the bestiary, this study will explore how this imagery reflects the ambiguous position and definition of the human. Dissertation/Thesis Anderson, Susan Poole (Author) Schleif, Corine (Advisor) Brown, Claudia (Committee member) Broglio, Ronald (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Art history Adam Naming the Animals anthropophagy bestiaries boars hyenas medieval art eng 108 pages M.A. Art History 2014 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25095 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Art history
Adam Naming the Animals
anthropophagy
bestiaries
boars
hyenas
medieval art
spellingShingle Art history
Adam Naming the Animals
anthropophagy
bestiaries
boars
hyenas
medieval art
Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary
description abstract: The medieval bestiary is often simply described as a moralized "encyclopedia of animals," however, these so-called "books of beasts" were made for humans, by humans, about humans. It is therefore surprising that one common pictorial subject of the bestiary has been left unexamined: humans. By viewing bestiary images through this lens, one may easily see man's underlying and unresolved struggle to maintain dominance over the beasts, and the Others projected onto them, thereby ensuring that "the (hu)man" remains a discrete definition. This study begins as the bestiary does, with the Naming of the Animals. Illustrations of Adam as a king, bestowing names of his choosing upon tame beasts express a kind of nostalgia for a now-lost time when humanity was secure in their identity as non-animal. This security no longer exists in the postlapsarian world, nor in the bestiary images following these scenes. In an attempt to maintain the illusion of dominion, many bestiary illuminations forego simple descriptive images in favor of gory hunting scenes. However, these conspicuous declarations of dominion only serve to highlight the fragility of the physical form, and even demonstrate the frailty of the human (male, Christian) identity. One such example is MS Bodley 764's boar illumination, in which the animal is killed at the hands of male hunters. This thesis unpacks this image of dominion in order to reveal the associated insecurities regarding race, gender, and species that lie beneath the surface. Subsequently, the study turns to the many bestiary images depicting human bodies brutally fragmented within the jaws of an animal. Anthropophagous bestiary animals often carry fears of the gender and ethnic Other; despite the bestiary's posturing of order and hierarchy, both the human body and identity are easily consumed and subsumed into the ever-present animal/Other. Just as in life, the human figures in the bestiary struggle to establish unquestioned dominion, only to be constantly undercut by the abject. By using a psychoanalytic approach to the human bodies of the bestiary, this study will explore how this imagery reflects the ambiguous position and definition of the human. === Dissertation/Thesis === M.A. Art History 2014
author2 Anderson, Susan Poole (Author)
author_facet Anderson, Susan Poole (Author)
title Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary
title_short Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary
title_full Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary
title_fullStr Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary
title_full_unstemmed Mirrors and Fears: Humans in the Bestiary
title_sort mirrors and fears: humans in the bestiary
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25095
_version_ 1718700433404329984