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Ceremonial Culture in Pre-Modern Europe
 
 
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Ceremonial Culture in Pre-Modern Europe [Paperback]

Nicholas Howe (Editor)

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Book Description

January 15, 2007
By enabling the spiritual or ineffable to register as visible and palpable, ceremonies perform the essential cultural work of ensuring continuity of belief and practice across generations. In the process, each ceremony becomes a visual drama with highly scripted acts, movements, and rhythms.

Unlike anthropologists in the field, scholars of the medieval and early modern world cannot witness ceremonies—the processions, dramas, rituals, and liturgies—and their choreography, or how they engaged with time and space. Denied the possibility of personal observation, how are historians to understand ceremonies such as a Catholic liturgical procession moving through a medieval town or the triumphal entry of a Renaissance ruler into a subjected city? Fortunately, considerable documentary, visual, and material evidence survives from Europe to help scholars frame necessary questions about pre-modern ceremonies.

The essayists in this volume identify and recover the excitement and dynamism that characterized ceremonial culture in pre-modern Europe. Each turns to key issues: the relation between public and private space, the development of fully-realized dramas and rituals from earlier forms, and the semiotic code that ceremonies manifested to their audiences. Their subjects include the Adventus procession at Chartres; Epiphany and Palm Sunday rituals in medieval Moscow; the staged entry of the future Emperor Charles V into Bruges in 1515; and ceremonies in Italian Renaissance cities interpreted through the lens of Renaissance optical theory. What emerges from each essay is a deeper understanding that any ceremony is, finally, an attempt to close the divide between abstract and literal, ideal and actual.


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

"In this volume, Nicholas Howe has brought together original and important essays focusing on medieval and early modern processions in Western Europe. The contributors share numerous insights that will interest scholars in anthropology, history of religion, performance history, social history, medieval and Early Modern studies, and art history." —Diane Wolfthal, Arizona State University

About the Author

NICHOLAS HOWE is professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley.

CONTRIBUTORS: Nicholas Howe, Margot Fassler, Michael S. Flier, Gordon Kipling, Edward Muir.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Adventos is the fundamental ritual structure underlying the great majority of liturgical processions and public ceremonies of the antique and the medieval Christian worlds. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
metaphysical theater, adventus ceremony, major processions, ceremonial culture, civic triumph, joyeuse entrée, chant texts, royal entry, three feasts, royal entries, new duke
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Middle Ages, Royal Portal, Chartres Cathedral, Philip of Spain, Henri de Feraudy, New York, Calvete de Estrella, Dame Antwerp, Druon Antigon, Clifford Geertz, Folger Shakespeare Library, Los Angeles, Mount of Olives, Old Testament, Research Library, The Getty Research Institute, Virgin Mary, Art Resource, Holy Spirit, Making History, Moscow River, Red Square, The Divine Office, Bibliothèque Municipale, Christ the Lord
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