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Seznec, Jean. . Survival of the pagan gods, the mythological tradition and its place in Renaissance humanism and art. / Translated from the French by Barbara F. Sessions. series [Princeton], Princeton U. P., [1972].
Call#: Van Pelt Library BR135 .S483 1972
Call#: Van Pelt Library BR135 .S483 1972


tagged pagan polytheism renaissance by steirer ...on 11-APR-08
Christianson, Paul, 1937- . Reformers and Babylon : English apocalyptic visions from the Reformation to the eve of the civil war / Paul Christianson. 0802053653 : series Toronto ; Buffalo : University of Toronto Press, c1978.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BR757 .C47

tagged apocalypticism renaissance by steirer ...on 11-APR-08
Ball, B. W. (Bryan W.) . Great expectation : eschatological thought in English Protestantism to 1660 / by Bryan W. Ball. 9004043152 series Leiden : Brill, 1975.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BT819.5 .B3

Wind, Edgar, 1900- . Pagan mysteries in the Renaissance. Rev. and enl. ed. series New York, W. W. Norton [1969, c1968]
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts N6915 .W53 1969
Call#: Fine Arts Library Fine Arts N6915 .W53 1969


tagged pagan polytheism renaissance by steirer ...on 07-APR-08
Klaassen, Walter, 1926- . Living at the end of the ages : apocalyptic expectation in the radical reformation / Walter Klaassen. 081918506X (cloth : alk. paper) series Lanham, Md. : University Press of America ; Waterloo, Ontario : Institute for Anabaptist and Mennonite Studies, Conrad Grebel College, c1992.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BT819.5 .K63 1992


tagged apocalypticism renaissance by steirer ...on 06-APR-08
Firth, Katharine R. . Apocalyptic tradition in reformation Britain, 1530-1645 / by Katharine R. Firth. 0198218680 : series Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1979.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BS647.2 .F46 1979


tagged apocalypticism renaissance by steirer ...on 06-APR-08
Barnes, Robin Bruce, 1951- . Prophecy and gnosis : apocalypticism in the wake of the Lutheran Reformation / Robin Bruce Barnes. 0804714053 (alk. paper) : series Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, 1988.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BT819.5 .B35 1988


tagged apocalypticism renaissance by steirer ...on 06-APR-08
Walker, D. P. (Daniel Pickering) . Spiritual & demonic magic : from Ficino to Campanella / D.P. Walker. 0271020458 series University Park, Pa. : Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BF1593 .W2 2000
Call#: Van Pelt Library BF1593 .W2 2000


tagged demons magic occult renaissance by steirer ...on 06-APR-08
. Occult and scientific mentalities in the Renaissance / edited by Brian Vickers. 0521258790 series Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1984.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BF1429 .O26 1984
Call#: Van Pelt Library BF1429 .O26 1984
Call#: Van Pelt Library BF1429 .O26 1984
Call#: Storage: From RECORD page, use Place Request tab STORAGE BF1429 .O26 1984
Call#: Storage: From RECORD page, use Place Request tab STORAGE BF1429 .O26 1984
Call#: Storage: From RECORD page, use Place Request tab STORAGE BF1429 .O26 1984


tagged magic occult renaissance by steirer ...and 1 other person ...on 05-APR-08
. Hermeticism and the Renaissance : intellectual history and the occult in early modern Europe / edited by Ingrid Merkel and Allen G. Debus. 0918016851 (alk. paper) series Washington : Folger Shakespeare Library ; London : Associated University Presses, c1988.
Call#: Rare Bk & Ms Library Furness Collection FURNESS 65.83 M54D


tagged hermeticism occult renaissance by steirer ...on 05-APR-08
Gombrich, E. H. (Ernst Hans), 1909-2001. . Symbolic images : studies in the art of the Renaissance / by E. H. Gombrich. 2d [small format] ed. 0714818313 series Oxford : Phaidon, 1978.
Call#: Van Pelt Library N6370 .G58 1978


tagged images occult renaissance by steirer ...on 05-APR-08
Bono, James J. (James Joseph) . Word of God and the languages of man : interpreting nature in early modern science and medicine / James J. Bono. 0299147908 (hc : alk. paper) series Madison : University of Wisconsin Press, c1995-
Call#: Van Pelt Library Q125.2 .B66 1995


tagged hermeneutics renaissance by steirer ...on 05-APR-08
Thomas, Keith Vivian. . Religion and the decline of magic: studies in popular beliefs in sixteenth and seventeenth century England [by] Keith Thomas. 0297002201 series London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1971.
Call#: Van Pelt Library BR377 .T48
Call#: Van Pelt Library BR377 .T48
Call#: Van Pelt Library BR377 .T48


tagged magic occult renaissance by steirer ...and 1 other person ...on 04-APR-08

 PARTIAL SYNOPSIS--> THE ENTIRE WORK IS TOO LONG TO POST THE ENTIRE THING!!!

The “Tragical History of Doctor Faustus” is referenced briefly in Ikiru, in the scene in which Watanabe meets the writer, but the play offers a richer understanding of the film if the two are seen as opposites of one another.  The basic plot of the story is that a man sells his soul to the devil in exchange for all the world’s knowledge and eventually goes to hell for it.  The two stories do share some similarities, for example, the known time of death of each character and the absence of God as a ‘way out, but it is the differences that allow for a deeper understanding.
    The writer presents himself as a ‘free Mephistopheles,’ which sets up the initial comparison between the two works.  The Mephistopheles analogy does not hold up, because the writer functions in a different manner than the demon Mephistopheles.  The writer is not the keeper of all arcane knowledge and is admittedly not even a very good writer.  His jaunt with Watanabe, through the nightlife of Tokyo, provides Watanabe with no deeper understanding of himself or his situation, which parallels with Faustus in that Faustus also gets ‘nothing’ in the end from Mephistopheles, because no knowledge in the world can save him from his fate.  Watanabe actually comes to a similar conclusion, realizing that earthly pleasures will not cure his true pain, which comes not from the cancer, but from the knowledge that he has missed out on life.  The false Mephistopheles, the writer, is the inversion of Faustus’s Mephistopheles and this analogical fowl-up has importance in its revelation that the film and play are inversions of one another.
    Faustus’s search for knowledge leads to his downfall and arrival in hell, whereas Watanabe’s search for understanding leads to his salvation.  The initial ‘Mephistophelean’ adventures of both Faustus and Watanabe are revealed to be fruitless, but it takes Faustus until the end of the play to realize it, but he is damned anyway, so it doesn’t matter.  Watanabe thinks he is damned, but unlike Faustus, he has a path to salvation.  The inversion here is that Faustus’s journey is a descent, while Watanabe’s is an ascent; this is a theme discussed in Goodwin’s analysis of the film.
    The fact that the film’s Mephistopheles works for free could be Kurosawa saying that in a modern, secular society like Japan, the answers to man’s questions do not lie with God, but with man himself.  Faustus was forced to turn to the ruler of hell in order to further his knowledge, but Watanabe, unlike Faustus, finds the knowledge within himself.  He tries to find the answers he is searching for, the meaning to his life, in other people, like the female coworker, Toyo, but he discovers that he can only rely on himself for the answers.  The gap in time between the two works may account for the difference in fate of the Protagonist (that is if you view them as complimentary pieces).