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Iconoclasm

1992
Abstract Iconoclasm, literally the smashing of images, is the term designating the movement that forbade the making or veneration of images, whether of God or of saints. The opposite position we usually call Iconoduly, although that word is not attested in Greek.
openaire   +1 more source

Iconoclasm and response on Dublin’s Sackville/O’Connell Street, 1759–2003

City, 2020
The residents of Dublin, Ireland have developed a robust commemorative infrastructure throughout the city since the early eighteenth century. A prominent site in this landscape is at the centre of O’Connell Street (Sackville Street from the late 1700s to
D. N. Boetcher
exaly   +2 more sources

Itineraries, iconoclasm, and the pragmatics of heritage

, 2020
Recent calls across the world for removing monuments to White supremacy have brought widespread attention to the power of images and the role of heritage in society.
Alexander Bauer
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Extremist iconoclasm versus real Islamic values: implications for heritage-based tourism development in Iraq

, 2020
Human civilization has a long cultural history with relics and places telling important stories about life before the advent of modern technology. Ancient artifacts are important contemporary manifestations of enduring human legacies, which humankind ...
Muhsin Mahdi Rebat Al-kanany
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Iconoclasm

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, 1952
ENGINEERS tending perhaps to be rather conservative beings it is no bad thing for one of their number from time to time to rise up and give them a ‘jolt’ by querying the bases on which their methods are founded or otherwise shaking them out of their complacency by casting doubts on the legitimacy of traditional methods of procedure.
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Pulsed Field Ablation-Will Coronary Spasm Lead to Iconoclasm?

JAMA cardiology, 2023
Bradley P. Knight, Anna Pfenniger
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Iconoclasm As Child's Play

, 2019
This book begins with the observation that, during the English Reformation, holy things taken from churches and monasteries were on occasion not smashed or burned but instead given to children as toys.
Joe Moshenska
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Iconoclasm

2014
Abstract Understanding iconoclasm simply as the breaking of images fails to adequately address why reformers of all eras have sought to decapitate, maim, and otherwise erase sacred art. This chapter takes a long view of iconoclasm as the active interrogation of objects by objects—through case studies from ancient, medieval, and ...
openaire   +1 more source

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