Carlo Ginzburg: Paura, reverenza, terrore
History
History of Art

Reviews

Fear, Reverence, Terror


ISBN: 9788845930041
publisher: Adelphi
year: 2015
pages: 311

 

We are surrounded by images, fairly drowning in them. From our cell phones to our computers, from our televisions at home to the screens that light up while we wait in the grocery store checkout line, images of all kinds are seducing us, commanding us to buy!, scaring us, dazzling us.

Fear, Reverence, Terror invites us to look at images slowly, with the help of a few examples: Picasso’s Guernica, the “Lord Kitchener Wants You” World War I recruitment poster, Jacques-Louis David’s Marat, the frontispiece of Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan, a cup of gilded silver with scenes from the conquest of the New World. Are these political images, Carlo Ginzburg asks? Yes, because every image is, in a sense, political—an instrument of power. Tacitus once wrote, unforgettably, that we are enslaved by lies of which we ourselves are the authors. Is it possible to break this bond? Fear, Reverence, Terror will answer this question.

 

Translations

Carlo Ginzburg: Fear Reverence Terror
University of Chicago Press, 2017 (USA)
Carlo Ginzburg: Paura reverenza terrore
Misuzu Shobo, 2019 (Japan)