Front cover image for A history of the heart

A history of the heart

The heart not only drives our physical life, but throughout human history it has also been viewed as the seat of our deepest emotions. It has figured hugely if metaphorically in nearly every aspect of human civilization, and as the unending subject of literature, music and art. Yet until now there has not been a study of this paramount icon of love. Ole M. Høystad ably fills this enormous gap with a compelling investigation into this epicentre of grief, joy and power. Firmly positioning the heart at the metaphorical and literal centre of human culture and history, Høystad combs through religions and philosophies from the beginning of civilization to explore such disparate historical points as the Aztecs' ritual of removing the still-beating heart from a living sacrificial victim and offering it to the gods; homosexuality and the heart in Greek antiquity; European attempts to employ alchemy in service of the mysteries of love; and the connections between the heart and wisdom in Sufism. Høystad charts how the heart has signified our essential desires, whether for love and passion in the medieval excesses of troubadour poetry and chivalric idealism, the body-soul dualism propounded by the Enlightenment, or even the modern notions of individualism expressed in the works of thinkers such as Nietzsche and Foucault. A provocative examination of the deepest vaults of our souls and the efforts of the many lonely hunters who have tried to unlock its secrets, A History of the Heart subverts the clichés to reveal a symbol of our fundamental humanity whose beats can be felt in every aspect of our lives
eBook, English, 2007
Reaktion, London, 2007
1 online resource (254 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color)
9781861898333, 9781861893116, 1861898339, 1861893116
676697998
The world of Gilgamesh
Ancient Egypt
The complex man of antiquity
The heart in the Bible and in Christianity
Islam's culture of the heart
The Aztecs : why so heartless?
Norse anthropology
The emotional turn in the High Middle Ages
The new subject
Montaigne : man is his own work
From the Renaissance and alchemy to the Romantic era
Shakespeare and the heart of darkness
Rousseau : philosopher of the heart
Herder and the expressivist turn
Faustian Goethe
The disenchantment and re-enchantment of the heart
The emotional cycle
Translated from the Norwegian
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