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A new look at how reading was practised and represented in England
from the seventh century to the beginnings of the print era,
finding many kinships between reading cultures across the medieval
longue duree. Even as it transforms human cultures, routines,
attention spans, and the wiring of our brains, the media revolution
of the last few decades also urges a reconsideration of the long
history of reading. The essays in this volume take a new look at
how reading was practised and represented in England from the
seventh century to the beginnings of the print era, using texts
from Aldhelm to Malory and Wynkyn de Worde, arguing that whether
unpicking intricate Latin, contemplating image-texts, or
participating in semiotically-rich public rituals, reading
cultivated and energized the subject's values, perceptions, and
attitudes to the world. Part I, "Practices of Reading", asks how
writers, scribes and artists engaged readerly attention through
textual layout, poetic form, hermeneutic difficulty, or images,
while Part II, "Politics of Reading", explores how different
textual communities manipulated the anxieties and opportunities for
education, moral improvement or entertainment associated with
reading; particular topics addressed include Bible translation and
exegesis, page layout, literary form and readerly practice,
fiction, hermeneutics, and performance. Although it understands
reading as culturally and technologically localized, the book finds
many kinships between reading cultures across the medieval longue
duree and the literatures and literacies that proliferate today.
Contributors: Amy Appleford, Michelle De Groot, Daniel Donoghue,
Andrew James Johnston, Andrew Kraebel, Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe,
Catherine Sanok, Samantha Katz Seal, James Simpson, Emily V.
Thornbury, Kathleen Tonry, Kathryn Mogk Wagner, Nicholas Watson,
Erica Weaver, Anna Wilson.
First full-length study of the role and duties of the medieval
cantor. Cantors made unparalleled contributions to the way time was
understood and history was remembered in the medieval Latin West.
The men and women who held this office in cathedrals and
monasteries were responsible for calculating the date of Easter and
the feasts dependent on it, for formulating liturgical celebrations
season by season, managing the library and preparing manuscripts
and other sources necessary to sustain the liturgical framework of
time, andpromoting the cults of saints. Crucially, their duties
also often included committing the past to writing, from simple
annals and chronicles to more fulsome histories, necrologies, and
cartularies, thereby ensuring that towns, churches, families, and
individuals could be commemorated for generations to come. This
volume seeks to address the fundamental question of how the range
of cantors' activities can help us to understand the many different
waysin which the past was written and, in the liturgy, celebrated
across the Middle Ages. Its essays are studies of constructions,
both of the building blocks of time and of the people who made and
performed them, in acts of ritual remembrance and in written
records; cantors, as this book makes clear, shaped the communal
experience of the past in the Middle Ages. Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis
is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at St. Martin's
University; Margot Fassler is Kenough-Hesburgh Professor of Music
History and Liturgy at the University of Notre Dame and Robert
Tangeman Professor Emerita of Music History at Yale University;
A.B. Kraebel is Assistant Professor of English at Trinity
University. Contributors: Cara Aspesi, Anna de Bakker, Alison I.
Beach, Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis, Margot E. Fassler, David Ganz, James
Grier, Paul Antony Hayward, Peter Jeffery, Claire Taylor Jones,
A.B.Kraebel, Lori Kruckenberg, Rosamond McKitterick, Henry Parkes,
Susan Rankin, C.C. Rozier, Sigbjorn Olsen Sonnesyn, Teresa Webber,
Lauren Whitnah
First full-length study of the role and duties of the medieval
cantor. Cantors made unparalleled contributions to the way time was
understood and history was remembered in the medieval Latin West.
The men and women who held this office in cathedrals and
monasteries were responsible for calculating the date of Easter and
the feasts dependent on it, for formulating liturgical celebrations
season by season, managing the library and preparing manuscripts
and other sources necessary to sustain the liturgical framework of
time, andpromoting the cults of saints. Crucially, their duties
also often included committing the past to writing, from simple
annals and chronicles to fuller histories, necrologies, and
cartularies, thereby ensuring that towns, churches, families, and
individuals could be commemorated for generations to come. This
volume seeks to address the fundamental question of how the range
of cantors' activities can help us to understand the many different
ways in which the past was written and, in the liturgy, celebrated
across the Middle Ages. Its essays are studies of constructions,
both of the building blocks of time and of the people who made and
performed them, in acts of ritual remembrance and in written
records; cantors, as this book makes clear, shaped the communal
experience of the past in the Middle Ages. KATIE ANN-MARIE BUGYIS
is Assistant Professor in the Program of Liberal Studies at the
University of Notre Dame; A.B. KRAEBEL is Assistant Professor of
English at Trinity University; MARGOT FASSLER is Kenough-Hesburgh
Professor of Music History and Liturgy at the University of Notre
Dame and Robert Tangeman Professor Emerita of Music History at Yale
University. Contributors: Cara Aspesi, Anna de Bakker, Alison I.
Beach, Katie Ann-Marie Bugyis, Margot E. Fassler, David Ganz, James
Grier, Paul Antony Hayward, Peter Jeffery, Claire TaylorJones, A.B.
Kraebel, Lori Kruckenberg, Rosamond McKitterick, Henry Parkes,
Susan Rankin, C.C. Rozier, Sigbjorn Olsen Sonnesyn, Teresa Webber,
Lauren Whitnah
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