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Bookbot

Stefanie Caeners

    Verbal visuality
    Healthy and liveable cities
    • Healthy and liveable cities

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      What makes a modern city worth living in? What keeps its inhabitants healthy and creates quality of life? What role do design and culture play in the design of these cities? These were some of the questions explored by participants of the workshop “Healthy and Liveable Cities”. The book collects selected essays, shows case studies and considers methodological ideas from a wide range of areas such as environmental medicine, urban sociology, community research, design research, landscape planning and literature and cultural studies.,

      Healthy and liveable cities
    • Verbal visuality

      • 179pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Throughout literary history, the visual arts have captivated writers, and since the late 20th century, intermedial narratives that blend word and image have gained popularity. This work explores the forms and functions of art in contemporary Anglophone fiction, focusing on novels and short stories where iconography and aesthetics are central. It evaluates how art discourses shape narratives and their broader implications beyond the text. In these narratives, plot, character development, and text structure, often enhanced by ekphrasis, reveal a deep connection to the visual arts. Characters often define themselves through art movements or specific works, while art objects serve as sources of consolation. The evaluation of individual works evolves into a universal discourse on the role of the arts. These texts emerge as significant hybrids, allowing readers to navigate between word and image, transforming narratives into artefacts that engage with pressing socio-political and socio-cultural issues. This analysis delves into these themes, drawing on a range of contemporary art narratives, including works by Salman Rushdie, Zadie Smith, Patricia Schonstein-Pinnock, Nick Hornby, and Siri Hustvedt.

      Verbal visuality