|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Among the most memorable innovations of music and poetry in
thirteenth-century France was a genre that seemed to privilege
sound over sense. The polytextual motet is especially well-known to
scholars of the Middle Ages for its tendency to conceal complex
allegorical meaning in a texture that, in performance, made words
less, rather than more, audible. It is with such musical sound that
this book is concerned. What did it mean to create a musical effect
so potentially independent from the meaning of words? Is it
possible such supermusical effects themselves had significance? The
Sense of Sound offers a radical recontextualization of French song
in the heyday of the motet c.1260-1330, and makes the case for
listening to musical sound against a range of other potently
meaningful sonorities, often premised on non-verbal meaning. In
identifying new audible interlocutors to music, it opens our ears
to a broad spectrum of sounds often left out of historical inquiry,
from the hubbub of the medieval city; to the eloquent babble of
madmen; to the violent clamor of charivari; to the charismatic
chatter of prayer. Drawing on a rich array of artistic evidence
(music, manuscripts, poetry, and images) and contemporary cultural
theory, it locates musical production in this period within a
larger cultural environment concerned with representing sound and
its emotional, ethical, and social effects. In so doing, The Sense
of Sound offers an experiment in how we might place central the
most elusive aspect of music's history: sound's vibrating, living
effect.
|
Medieval Obscenities (Paperback)
Nicola F. McDonald, Nicola McDonald; Contributions by Alastair J. Alastair J. Minnis, Carolyne Larrington, Danuta Shanzer, …
|
R756
Discovery Miles 7 560
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
Obscenity is central to an understanding of medieval culture, and
it is here examined in a number of different media. Obscenity is,
if nothing else, controversial. Its definition, consumption and
regulation fire debate about the very meaning of art and culture,
law, politics and ideology. And it is often, erroneously, assumed
to be synonymous with modernity. Medieval Obscenities examines the
complex and contentious role of the obscene - what is offensive,
indecent or morally repugnant - in medieval culture from late
antiquity through to the end of the Middle Ages in western Europe.
Its approach is multidisciplinary, its methodologies divergent and
it seeks to formulate questions and stimulate debate. The essays
examine topics as diverse as Norse defecation taboos, the
Anglo-Saxon sexual idiom, sheela-na-gigs, impotence in the church
courts, bare ecclesiastical bottoms, rude sounds and dirty words,
as well as the modern reception and representation of the medieval
obscene. They demonstrate not only the vitality of medieval
obscenity, but its centrality to our understanding of the Middle
Ages and ourselves. Contributors: MICHAEL CAMILLE, GLENN DAVIS,
EMMA DILLON, SIMON GAUNT, JEREMY GOLDBERG, EAMONN KELLY, CAROLYNE
LARRINGTON, NICOLAMCDONALD, ALASTAIR MINNIS, DANUTA SHANZER
This book explores the role of music in an early fourteenth-century
French manuscript (BN, fr. 146). The musical repertories found in
this manuscript, particularly those interpolated into the Old
French satire, the Roman de Fauvel, are frequently used to
illuminate the wider history of French medieval music. This study
sets the manuscript against the wider culture of Parisian
book-making, showing how in devising new systems of design and
folio layout, its creators developed a new kind of materiality in
music: it illustrates how music is expressive in ways that are
unperformable apart from its visual representation. This study is
primarily concerned with the workings of fr. 146; however, it also
argues that the new attitudes to (material) music-making embodied
in that manuscript serve as a model for exploring other music
manuscripts to emerge in late-medieval France.
This book explores the role of music in an early fourteenth-century
French manuscript (BN, fr. 146). The musical repertories found in
this manuscript, particularly those interpolated into the Old
French satire, the Roman de Fauvel, are frequently used to
illuminate the wider history of French medieval music. This study
sets the manuscript against the wider culture of Parisian
book-making, showing how in devising new systems of design and
folio layout, its creators developed a new kind of materiality in
music: it illustrates how music is expressive in ways that are
unperformable apart from its visual representation. This study is
primarily concerned with the workings of fr. 146; however, it also
argues that the new attitudes to (material) music-making embodied
in that manuscript serve as a model for exploring other music
manuscripts to emerge in late-medieval France.
|
You may like...
Braai
Reuben Riffel
Paperback
R495
R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
|