Images of the Cross in Early Modern Korea: The Geomantic Prophecy of the Chŏnggam-nok and the Protestant Flag of the Red Cross

2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 117-162
Author(s):  
Sung-Deuk Oak
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Richard Viladesau

This work surveys the ways in which theologians, artists, and composers of the early modern period dealt with the passion and death of Christ. The fourth volume in a series, it locates the theology of the cross in the context of modern thought, beginning with the Enlightenment, which challenged traditional Christian notions of salvation and of Christ himself. It shows how new models of salvation were proposed by liberal theology, replacing the older “satisfaction” model with theories of Christ as bringer of God’s spirit and as social revolutionary. It shows how the arts during this period both preserved the classical tradition and responded to innovations in theology and in style.


Author(s):  
Nancy Um

This chapter looks at two accounts of the French 1737 bombing of Mocha to make the concluding case that cultural and religious differences in the ports and emporia of Yemen were often understood in material terms and that the anxieties and discomforts generated by the cross-cultural encounter were expressed most readily through a language of things. It validates material culture as an important tool that served to assert, but also to evaluate, merchant identity and standing across the early modern western Indian Ocean.


2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-12
Author(s):  
Mark Davis

An ABC Four Corners team investigates allegations about the role of the International Red Cross and the British military in a massacre in the Southern Highlands of Irian Jaya during May 1996. The story of what happened has never been told before. Caption: Australian journalist Mark Davis and Kelly Kwalik in West Papua (Irian Jaya). Image: ABC Four Corners See the video at Engage Media


2013 ◽  
Vol 18 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 180-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hester Higton

Books on scientific instruments have always made extensive use of illustration, whether in the form of detailed reproductions of objects, schematic diagrams to explain the use of instruments, or allegorical embellishments for title pages. This article looks at the use of images in a single text on instruments: Edmund Gunter’s De Sectore et Radio (On the Description and Use of the Sector and the Cross-Staff) of 1623. This work contains a remarkable variety of diagrams and illustrations, thus allowing study of the ways in which both woodcuts and engravings, and both simple and complex images were used to illustrate instrument texts in the early modern period.



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