Constructing Authority in the Paratext: The Poems to Johannes Hevelius’ Selenographia

Perspectives on Science 30 (6):1005-1041 (2022)
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Abstract

When Johannes Hevelius’ Selenographia, sive Lunae descriptio (Selenography, or A Description of The Moon) was printed in 1647, its rich paratext featured a portrait epigram and a collection of nine Neo-Latin poems praising the first book of the Danzig (Gdańsk) astronomer. The present article examines these ten poems as a place where Hevelius’ authority as an author and astronomer is being constructed, focusing on the fictionalized and fictional relationships between Hevelius and other authorities depicted in the text. In a sort of kaleidoscope, the poems relate Hevelius to prominent astronomers like Galileo and Copernicus, to Columbus, the paragon of the discoverer, to figures from ancient myth, and even, in the form of anagrams, to his own name. Moreover, they highlight Hevelius’ personal qualities as an astronomer, as a member of the realm of literature, and as a citizen of Danzig. The image of the author that emerges from the poems asserts Hevelius’ place in the public space of literature and fashions him into an authoritative figure at the threshold of his text.

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Picturing the moon: Hevelius’s and Riccioli’s visual debate.Janet Vertesi - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 38 (2):401-421.
The Moon and the Western Imagination.Scott L. Montgomery - 2001 - Utopian Studies 12 (1):222-225.

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