"Bussels and Van Oostveldt convincingly characterize how the sublime could manifest in the Dutch Republic, providing a real or imagined visual experience for their viewers. The authors provide a strong case for adding the sublime into the lexicon for analyzing Dutch visual culture."-- Renaissance Quarterly"“[This book] consider[s] how viewers regard art works, both visually and through haptic experience; and how viewers respond, intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually, through related ideas."-- Religion and the Arts (v.28), Brill.com"[W]hether engaging with the tension between the sublime and religion (particularly the fear instilled by contact with the divine), or magnificence in architecture or the landscape, the authors carefully establish an analytical framework that relies on transmediality and consider a wide range of textual sources in order to generate new perspectives on the sublime."-- Similious (v. 46)