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Keskiaikainen liturgia elettynä ja koettuna

Korhonen Johanna; Heikkinen Seppo; Räsänen Marika; Vuori Hilkka-Liisa

Keskiaikainen liturgia elettynä ja koettuna

Korhonen Johanna
Heikkinen Seppo
Räsänen Marika
Vuori Hilkka-Liisa
Katso/Avaa
Toimitettu_Räsänen_et_al. 30.10.2019.pdf (539.3Kb)
Lataukset: 

Suomen kirkkohistoriallinen seura
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042820896
Tiivistelmä

Medieval liturgy as lived emotions

This paper addresses the images and emotions stimulated by medieval liturgy, as well as their role as a verbal and musical medium, namely, sonic hagiogra- phy. We examine the topic in relation to two historical frames: on one hand, the medieval Dominican community where our liturgical sources originat- ed; on the other, the workshops on medieval chant that we organized in 2015 and 2016. This discussion aims at a many-sided study of a researcher’s means of interpreting the past, while also addressing the interpretation of medieval imagery as informed by the background of the present, utilizing the subjective experiences of a modern listener.

Our medieval research material consists of the musical notation and texts of the liturgical chants dedicated to the Dominican Saint Thomas Aquinas (1224/5–1274). The extant memorial chants of Thomas (including their music and lyrics) and their contextualization in our knowledge of Dominican litur- gy provide our analysis on the function of medieval music with an important frame of reference. In analyzing the material collected in our workshops (de- scriptions of participants’ thoughts and emotions), we have been guided by theories of modality, acoustic feeling and phenomenology.

This study focuses, above all, on the body: the living and dead body of Thomas, his relics, and the bodies of the medieval and modern singers who performed liturgical chants that describe the physicality of Thomas Aquinas. The structure of the article moves between medieval and modern contexts as we observe the sensory impressions created by music in the Middle Ages and the modern world on occasions when their respective singers have partici- pated corporally in the offices of Thomas Aquinas by singing and listening.

The material collected in our workshops is largely similar, regardless of the participants’ age, education and other background factors. This is an indicator of the general uniformity of the human auditory experience. A singer’s per- sonal voice in his or her own body can produce experiences that connect to the atmosphere of medieval chant and its singers.

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  • Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]

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