Other Worlds: Utopias in the Art of Late Ancient Eurasia

J. Elsner
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Abstract

This article examines a profound contradiction inherent in the idea of utopia as conceptually formulated by Thomas More in the Renaissance and clearly implicit in pre-humanist utopian, Arcadian, or paradisal imagery and descriptions, reaching back via early Christianity to Greco-Roman antiquity and resonating equally within Asian Buddhism. The idea of utopia from Greek antiquity to ancient India has evoked an optimism not unconnected to the conviction that there is a better place to which we will go after death, such as heaven. This kind of faith can have no rational basis, but the human condition is susceptible to a good deal more than the mere constraints of reason. Arguably, the only philosophically viable utopia is apophatic—that is, a place or state undescribable by any of the concepts or discourses used to define real spaces. Despite clear awareness across Eurasian cultures of the irrationality of a positive utopia (as we still continue to understand the word), their visual productions proceeded to give full vent to this optimism. This article examines a comparative range of such visual approaches across ancient Eurasia.
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其他世界:古代欧亚大陆晚期艺术中的乌托邦
这篇文章探讨了乌托邦概念中固有的深刻矛盾,这一概念是由托马斯·莫尔在文艺复兴时期概念化的,并且明显隐含在前人道主义乌托邦、田园牧歌或天堂的意象和描述中,可以追溯到早期基督教到希腊罗马时代,并在亚洲佛教中产生同样的共鸣。从古希腊到古印度,乌托邦的概念唤起了一种乐观主义,这种乐观主义与我们死后会去一个更好的地方的信念不无关系,比如天堂。这种信仰可能没有理性基础,但人类的状况容易受到远不止理性约束的影响。可以说,唯一在哲学上可行的乌托邦是虚无缥缈的,也就是说,一个地方或状态,用任何概念或话语来定义真实的空间都无法描述。尽管欧亚文化清楚地意识到积极乌托邦的不合理性(我们仍然继续理解这个词),但他们的视觉作品继续充分发泄这种乐观主义。本文考察了古代欧亚大陆上这种视觉方法的比较范围。
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