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El. knyga: Fullness of Time: Temporalities of the Fifteenth-Century Low Countries

  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Nov-2017
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226514826
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 13-Nov-2017
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226514826

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The Low Countries were at the heart of innovation in Europe in the fifteenth century. Throughout this period, the flourishing cultures of the Low Countries were also wrestling with time itself. The Fullness of Time explores that struggle, and the changing conceptions of temporality that it represented and embodied showing how they continue to influence historical narratives about the emergence of modernity today.
 
The Fullness of Time asks how the passage of time in the Low Countries was ordered by the rhythms of human action, from the musical life of a cathedral to the measurement of time by clocks and calendars, the work habits of a guildsman to the devotional practices of the laity and religious orders. Through a series of transdisciplinary case studies, it explores the multiple ways that objects, texts and music might themselves be said to engage with, imply, and unsettle time, shaping and forming the lives of the inhabitants of the fifteenth-century Low Countries. Champion reframes the ways historians have traditionally told the history of time, allowing us for the first time to understand the rich and varied interplay of temporalities in the period.
 


Over the course of the fifteenth century, the Low Countries transformed Europe’s economic, political and cultural life. Innovative and influential cultural practices emerged across the region in flourishing courts, towns, religious houses, guilds and confraternities. Whether in visual culture, music, devotional practice, or communal rituals, the thriving cultures of the Low Countries wrestled with time, both through explicit measurement and reflection, and in the rhythms of social and religious life. This book offers a deeper understanding of how time was structured and experienced by different constituencies through a series of detailed readings of diverse cultural objects and practices, ranging from woodcuts and painted altarpieces, to early print books, and to the use of polyphony in the liturgy. Individual chapters are devoted to life in the university towns of Louvain and Ghent, the liturgical rituals at Cambrai Cathedral, and the rich pageantry that marked the courts of Philip the Good and the new Burgundian rulers. What emerges is a complex temporal landscape in which devotional and secular practices and experiences merged into a new ?fullness of time.”
List of Illustrations
ix
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction 1(25)
1 The Polyphony of Civic Time in Fifteenth-Century Leuven
26(38)
2 The Altarpiece of the Holy Sacrament: Making Time in Leuven's St. Peter's Church
64(26)
3 Music, Time, and Devotion: Emotional Narratives at the Cathedral of Cambrai
90(17)
4 The Advent of the Lamb: Unfolding History and Liturgy in Fifteenth-Century Ghent
107(25)
5 Calendars and Chronology: Temporal Devotion in Fifteenth-Century Leuven
132(41)
6 Time for the Fasciculus temporum: Time, Text, and Vision in Early Print Culture
173(24)
Conclusion 197(8)
Acknowledgments 205(4)
Notes 209(34)
Bibliography 243(32)
Index 275
Matthew Champion is a lecturer in medieval history at Birkbeck, University of London.