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Keywords = Georges Didi-Huberman

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38 pages, 9798 KB  
Article
Catalan Sigillography and Beyond: Iconic Behaviors in Medieval Breaking Seals
by Alfons Puigarnau
Religions 2025, 16(4), 527; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040527 - 17 Apr 2025
Viewed by 3541
Abstract
The author analyzes various cases of breaking seal matrices in medieval Catalonia and other regions in this text. The manuscript notes of the Catalan sigillographer Ferran de Sagarra guide the exploration of the mechanisms of signification associated with an essential medieval political theology. [...] Read more.
The author analyzes various cases of breaking seal matrices in medieval Catalonia and other regions in this text. The manuscript notes of the Catalan sigillographer Ferran de Sagarra guide the exploration of the mechanisms of signification associated with an essential medieval political theology. Beyond the materiality of the sigillary matrix and the printed seal, one can decipher a series of iconic behaviors that allow the author to propose a method for understanding European cultural history through anachronistic narrative forms akin to those of Aby Warburg, Walter Benjamin, or, more recently, Georges Didi-Huberman. It is possible to demonstrate the historical validity of seals in the service of a cultural history and thought that transcends political or religious narratives, opening new horizons in the understanding of the Latin West from the Carolingian period to the apex of international Gothic. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Religions and Humanities/Philosophies)
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17 pages, 318 KB  
Article
Oneiric Witnessing: Dreamscapes of War
by Magdalena Zolkos
Humanities 2025, 14(2), 29; https://doi.org/10.3390/h14020029 - 11 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2100
Abstract
Are wartime dream diaries a testimony to violence and its impact on society and culture? Do dreams shape and respond to history and the collective remembrance of war? This article argues that wartime dream collections constitute a testimonial practice that brings visibility to [...] Read more.
Are wartime dream diaries a testimony to violence and its impact on society and culture? Do dreams shape and respond to history and the collective remembrance of war? This article argues that wartime dream collections constitute a testimonial practice that brings visibility to experiences hidden from the public domain and missing from dominant discourses on war. Connecting post-2022 Ukrainian dream diaries and theoretical contributions to cultural dream analysis by Charlotte Beradt, Georges Didi-Huberman, and Wilfred Bion, I argue that recognizing dream sharing as witnessing raises ethical and political questions because it is not a constative speech act, but a form of thinking about and action on history. Within this ethical–political perspective, sharing dreams is never merely about relaying contents to the reader but a relational act of self-disclosure. I conclude that to read records of war dreams is inseparable from being called upon to receive and offer hospitality to a dream. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cultural Studies & Critical Theory in the Humanities)
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