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Horizontal Learning in the High Middle Ages - Peer-to-Peer Knowledge Transfer in Religious Communities (Hardcover, 0): Micol... Horizontal Learning in the High Middle Ages - Peer-to-Peer Knowledge Transfer in Religious Communities (Hardcover, 0)
Micol Long, Tjamke Snijders, Steven Vanderputten; Contributions by Cedric Giraud, Jay Diehl, …
R3,730 Discovery Miles 37 300 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The history of medieval learning has traditionally been studied as a vertical transmission of knowledge from a master to one or several disciples. Horizontal Learning in the High Middle Ages: Peer-to-Peer Knowledge Transfer in Religious Communities centres on the ways in which cohabiting peers learned and taught one another in a dialectical process - how they acquired knowledge and skills, but also how they developed concepts, beliefs, and adapted their behaviour to suit the group: everything that could mold a person into an efficient member of the community. This process of 'horizontal learning' emerges as an important aspect of the medieval learning experience. Progressing beyond the view that high medieval religious communities were closed, homogeneous, and fairly stable social groups, the essays in this volume understand communities as the product of a continuous process of education and integration of new members. The authors explore how group members learned from one another, and what this teaches us about learning within the context of a high medieval community.

Images, Improvisations, Sound, and Silence from 1000 to 1800 - Degree Zero (Hardcover, 0): Babette Hellemans, Alissa Jones... Images, Improvisations, Sound, and Silence from 1000 to 1800 - Degree Zero (Hardcover, 0)
Babette Hellemans, Alissa Jones Nelson; Contributions by Rokus Groot, Pierre-Olivier Dittmar, Cedric Giraud, …
R3,723 Discovery Miles 37 230 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The act of drawing a line or uttering a word is often seen as integral to the process of making art. This is especially obvious in music and the visual arts, but applies to literature, performance, and other arts as well. These collected essays, written by scholars from diverse fields, take a historical view of the richness of creation out of nothing (creatio ex nihilo) in order to draw out debates, sometimes implicit and sometimes formally stated, about the production and reproduction of cultural meaning in a period of great change and novelty, between the beginnings of the medieval intellectual tradition and the imprint of the Enlightenment. The authors pose the following questions: Do tradition and creativity conflict with one another, or are they complementary? What are the tensions between composition and live performance? What is the role of the audience in perceiving the object of art? Are such objects fixed or flexible? What about the status of the event? Is the event part of creation, in the sense that it disturbs the still waters of historical continuity? These and other questions build on the foundation of Roland Barthes' concept of Degree Zero, offering new insights into what it means to create.

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