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Table of Contents
Frontmatter
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Prologue
1 Hyperreality and Truthiness
2 Reading Blake's "The SICK ROSE
3 Ethics Versus Technics in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Still Life
4 Vanitas: The McGuffin of Still Life
5 Still Life, Trade, and Truthiness
6 The Pretext of Occasion: Floris van Dijck's Laid Table with Cheese and Fruit, c. 1615
7 Nature Mourant: The Fictiveness of Dutch Realism
8 The Embarrassment of Niches: Christoffel van den Berghe's Vase of Flowers in a Stone Niche, 1617
9 Nature Mourant: Bosschaert's Leaves, Merian's Caterpillars
10 "Small-scale Violence"
11 The Darker Spirit: Van Huysum's Heaps
12 Posies: The Bouquet as Pretext of Occasion
13 Joris Hoefnagel and the Roots of Dutch Flower Painting
Conclusion: Allegorical Capture and Interpretive Release
Epigraph Sources
Notes
Index of Names
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Prologue
1 Hyperreality and Truthiness
2 Reading Blake's "The SICK ROSE
3 Ethics Versus Technics in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Still Life
4 Vanitas: The McGuffin of Still Life
5 Still Life, Trade, and Truthiness
6 The Pretext of Occasion: Floris van Dijck's Laid Table with Cheese and Fruit, c. 1615
7 Nature Mourant: The Fictiveness of Dutch Realism
8 The Embarrassment of Niches: Christoffel van den Berghe's Vase of Flowers in a Stone Niche, 1617
9 Nature Mourant: Bosschaert's Leaves, Merian's Caterpillars
10 "Small-scale Violence"
11 The Darker Spirit: Van Huysum's Heaps
12 Posies: The Bouquet as Pretext of Occasion
13 Joris Hoefnagel and the Roots of Dutch Flower Painting
Conclusion: Allegorical Capture and Interpretive Release
Epigraph Sources
Notes
Index of Names