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Thisvolume is devoted to an historical lexical and conceptual
analysis of poetological expressions in German medieval literature,
expressions such as schrift (a >scripta (TM), a >writinga
(TM)), rede (a >speecha (TM)), buoch (a >booka (TM)),
tihtaere (a >poeta (TM)), vindaere (a >purveyora (TM) [a
>of wild talesa (TM)]), hA"ren (a >heara (TM)), lesen (a
>reada (TM)), erniuwen (a >renewa (TM)), voltihten (a
>composea (TM)), etc. Despite individual studies, these terms,
which are of central importance in medieval texts, yet are only
vaguely defined in them, have largely been neglected by researchers
and have hardly ever been presented as a connected system. However,
these terms do open the way to an understanding of central aspects
of medieval views of literature and of the historical conception of
works and authors. The volume presents a collection of papers by
renowned medievalists on key terms and items in medieval poetics
and historical semantics.
Paradisus anime intelligentis is the Latin name of one of the most
important late medieval collections of German sermons, about half
of which comprises sermons by Meister Eckhart. The studies deal
with the theological programme of the sermons, the manuscripts,
their transmission and processing, together with selected
individual texts. The volume is completed by a study of a
contiguous collection, the KAlner Klosterpredigten [Cologne
Monastic Sermons].
The focus on inner space unites two topical areas of cultural
anthropology: space as a structural paradigm, and the focal
differentiation between the categories of a oeinnera and a oeoutera
. The literature of medieval Germany, in staging such interior
space in a variety of ways, poses questions about difference,
liminality, and transgression, and thus allows abstract concepts
and processes to be articulated: in a culture otherwise dominated
by that which is present and visible, inner space conveys notions
of psychological, cosmological or textual order.
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