Sensitivity to the Chester Shepherds’ soundedness in performance reveals that its climactic action, an angel singing a sophisticated Gloria, its audience of shepherds responding with playful macaronic Latin, stands not as an isolated outburst but rather as the concentrated centre of a thoroughgoing network of meaningful sound that stretches from the play’s first to its last line. By reading the Chester Shepherds play with ears attuned to its sounded dimension, we gain insight into how the play fostered opportunities for interanimating presence, identity, and community by manipulating the aural space of late medieval theatrical enactment to draw an audience into sonorous presence. The play patterns sounds, verbal and otherwise, into a meanin...
International audienceOne cannot see the eight capitals of the former abbey church at Cluny without ...
This thesis investigates the generation of Christian meaning via the performance of instrumental mus...
This chapter explores the place of ‘sweet music’ in the early Western Church and its subsequent inf...
Sensitivity to the Chester Shepherds’ soundedness in performance reveals that its climactic action —...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
The High and Late Middle Ages have often been regarded as an ocular age. Research on medieval religi...
The essays opens by demonstrating how sound is thematic in the Tapiters' and Couchers' pageant of Ch...
This article examines a civic entertainment staged in Chester in 1610. It explores how visual, verba...
This dissertation examines the various ways in which early Christ-followers incorporated music into ...
Bells have had a central role in the formation and solidification of communities. The idea of a ‘Par...
My dissertation argues that numerous fourteenth-century texts connect listening with ethics in a phe...
Since medieval literature was mostly consumed by listening, its functioning was influenced by the pe...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the York plays as a form of medie...
International audienceOne cannot see the eight capitals of the former abbey church at Cluny without ...
This thesis investigates the generation of Christian meaning via the performance of instrumental mus...
This chapter explores the place of ‘sweet music’ in the early Western Church and its subsequent inf...
Sensitivity to the Chester Shepherds’ soundedness in performance reveals that its climactic action —...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
This thesis offers a new approach to the study of actor-audience relations in late medieval English ...
The High and Late Middle Ages have often been regarded as an ocular age. Research on medieval religi...
The essays opens by demonstrating how sound is thematic in the Tapiters' and Couchers' pageant of Ch...
This article examines a civic entertainment staged in Chester in 1610. It explores how visual, verba...
This dissertation examines the various ways in which early Christ-followers incorporated music into ...
Bells have had a central role in the formation and solidification of communities. The idea of a ‘Par...
My dissertation argues that numerous fourteenth-century texts connect listening with ethics in a phe...
Since medieval literature was mostly consumed by listening, its functioning was influenced by the pe...
“Performing Piety” examines the interdependent relationship between medieval sermons and plays in la...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the York plays as a form of medie...
International audienceOne cannot see the eight capitals of the former abbey church at Cluny without ...
This thesis investigates the generation of Christian meaning via the performance of instrumental mus...
This chapter explores the place of ‘sweet music’ in the early Western Church and its subsequent inf...