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    UID:
    b3kat_BV024254290
    Language: Undetermined
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    New York. NY : Oxford University Press
    UID:
    gbv_1679411152
    Format: xviii, 284 Seiten , Illustrationen, Notenbeispiele
    ISBN: 9780190948610
    Content: "In his song, Lanqan li jorn, the early-twelfth-century troubadour Jaufre Rudel expresses a sense of wonder and uncertainty about the future, one that he maps onto his perception of geography as complex, interwoven, and often unknowable. The song proclaims Jaufre's intention to travel eastward to the Crusade front as a Christian pilgrim, and to unite there with his beloved Lady (generally understood as the Countess of Tripoli), the object of his amor de loing [love from afar]. Jaufre expresses both ambivalence and a sense of possibility as he prepares to depart outremar. In Jaufre's ideology, distance suggests the multivalent difficulties inherent in this effort--the challenges of geographical travels and unknown roads; the emotional separation between lovers and uncertain pathways; and the subjective distances between the ideals of French courtliness, Christian values, and his imagining of the land of Saracens. Because the pathways that lie before him--the ports and roads--are so many and so unfathomable, Jaufre cannot prophesy the outcome of this journey. As Jaufre contemplated the unknown East, he could not have predicted the impact of the Crusade efforts or the song-making traditions in which he participated. According to his vida, or biographical sketch (although these were often fictionalized), Jaufre would die in the East while on the Crusade venture; having often imagined the Countess of Tripoli, he would become ill on the journey, arriving in the Syrian county only just in time to be embraced his beloved and die in her arms. Jaufre was one of many creators of the Crusade period to contemplate a new world, one marked by Crusading, through song. In doing so, he employed geographical rhetoric in ways that engaged his belief systems about love, politics, religion, and space. In this book, I locate ideologies of early Crusade culture as expressed in the Occitanian song (in the south of modern-day France), particularly in Latin devotional song and troubadour lyric. Such songs engage their Crusading context through text and melody, through metaphors of travel, distance, and geography. I argue that these songs reflect Crusade perspectives, articulate regional beliefs and local identities, and demonstrate the rhetorical and expressive possibilities of music and poetry in combination. Today, in keeping with the concepts of mouvance and re-invention, as articulated by Paul Zumthor and Amelia Van Vleck among others, we understand troubadour song as a site of ...
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis Seite 245-270
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780190948634
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9780190948641
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe Golden, Rachel May Mapping medieval identities in occitanian crusade song New York : Oxford University Press, 2020
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
    Keywords: Frankreich ; Okzitanisch ; Latein ; Troubadourlyrik ; Kreuzfahrerlied ; Identität ; Geschichte 1100-1300 ; Lyrik ; Frankreich ; Geschichte 1100-1300 ; Hochschulschrift
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