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Review: The memory palace of Matteo Ricci

Editorial Review - Kirkus Reviews

For his latest depature from conventional literary forms, Yale historian-of-China Spence (The Death of Woman Wang, The Gate of Heavenly Peace) follows the example of his subject, 16th-century Jesuit missionary Matteo Ricci--who not only introduced Christianity into China, but ""taught the Chinese how to build a memory palace"": a mental construct of myriad images, used from ancient times through the Middle Ages, Spence tells us, as a mnemonic device. To the illustrious Chinese who flocked to him for instruction, it was akin to alchemy or other arcane knowledge: ""We must remember if at one level Ricci's career makes sense only in the context of an aggressive Counter-Reformation Catholicism, as part of an 'expansion in Europe' in the late sixteenth century. . . it also makes sense only in a far older context. . . reaching back through the Middle Ages to a world where the priests of the Christian religion shared the tasks of consoling mankind with the 'cunning men' who dealt in magic, alchemy, cosmography, and astrology."" Thus, the scope, the diversity and fludity of Spence's remarkable text: from the four memory images that Ricci devised for his Chinese pupils (in Chinese ideograph form), and the four religious pictures he left them, Spence ranges through Ricci's childhood and youth and travels, the vagaries of his life in China (from which, by Chinese edict, no Westerner could depart), the conditions of his time--and beyond, within. The picture of ""the Apostle of the Waves,"" Peter floundering in the Sea of Galilee, invokes the hazards of 16th-century seafaring, the contemporary views of pilots (in travel writings, in Cervantes' Don Quixote and Shakespeare's Macbeth), Ricci's initial voyage from Lisbon to Goa (""the ship was a microcosm of the life ahead, with its mixture of dangers, hitherto unexperienced social relations, physical discomforts, and opportunities for austere or public devotion""), the teeming life of China's waterways, the near-loss of Ricci's precious Plantin Bible in a flood, the drowning of his cherished young novice and friend. ""The Road to Emmaeus"" brings discourse on Christian and Chinese concepts, the methodology of conversion, and the pressures on Ricci; it ends in his delirium and death. The final image and picture are a pair: a Chinese servant girl holding a child in her arms, and a Virgin and Child. Spence takes his leave of Ricci in their presence. Exceptional.

User reviews

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Steve Johnson - Goodreads

I discovered this book after reading Derren Browns 'Tricks of the mind' ... He listed this has a reference for memory techniques. I quickly realised that this wasn't just based on memory techniques ... Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Linda - Goodreads

An elegant, learned introduction to the life, times and theology of the Jesuit Matteo Ricci, who lived in China during the Ming Dynasty. It requires close attention, but repays it. Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Eddy Allen - Goodreads

In 1577, the Jesuit Priest Matteo Ricci set out from Italy to bring Christian faith and Western thought to Ming dynasty China. To capture the complex emotional and religious drama of Ricci's ... Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - James - Goodreads

While historically interesting, it really didn't give me either the depth of the man nor the insights into his methods that I was really looking for. It is a solid biography, though, if that's what you're looking for. Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Katie - Goodreads

A fascinating book, though a little bit frustrating. I absolutely love the idea behind this book, but I think the execution only sometimes matches up to the concept's promise. Matteo Ricci was a ... Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - John Stark - Goodreads

been reading this one for a while... Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Stedwards - Goodreads

should re-read. read at scu, super interesting. Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Hadrian - Goodreads

An interesting book which is something more than an ordinary biography. Matteo Ricci is an interesting character, and the Palace of Memory is a framework and a link between topics, but there is also ... Read full review

Review: The Memory Palace of Matteo Ricci

User Review  - Ensiform - Goodreads

Not a traditional biography, this book explores the 16th-century world, both European and Chinese, of Matteo Ricci in a set of themed vignettes drawn from four examples Ricci's own system of mnemonics ... Read full review

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All reviews - 31

All reviews - 31