Caroline Emmelius
University of Düsseldorf
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Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik | 2013
Caroline Emmelius
As a religion of revelation, Christianity has always had to mediate between the spoken and the written word. This conflict can be found in the private revelations and lives of religious women of the later Middle Ages. This paper focuses on the role sound, voice and song play in texts from Cistercian and Dominican monasteries of the late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. It argues that the texts’ aesthetic achievements reside not only in their visual, metaphorical quality but also in the way they try to preserve the voices’ sound in the text. A text such as Mechthild’s ₻Flowing light of the Godhead₫ subtly reflects on the difficulties in differentiating between the spoken and the sung word, and insists on the lack of sound in the written text. The lives of nuns collected in the Dominican ›sister-books‹ use incidents of heavenly and angelic sounds, as well as choir and private song, as a means of narrative emplotment. Heavenly sound and song can be read as signs of future death; moreover, they open up symbolic spaces in order to mediate between heaven and earth, in order to lead the soul to heaven. The nun’s performance of songs could indicate an aesthetic quality of ›sweetness‹ (süeze) that is reflected in Christ as well as in the lives of the nuns themselves. Furthermore, the time structure of the songs may also serve as an epiphany of timeless heavenly life, in the process, both rounding out and transgressing the narrative structure of the vita.
Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik | 2011
Caroline Emmelius
The article focuses on the relation of legal discourse and case narration in medieval tales. It discusses three texts by the late medieval writer Heinrich Kaufringer that show differing impacts of legal conceptions and structures on the act of narration. On the one hand Kaufringer’s narrator seems to be much occupied with legal institutions and the way they work. On the other hand, however, he fails in transforming his vision of a well organized, just world into narrative practice. Paradoxically, this seems to be due to his reliance on the structure of trials. While it allows for cases to be negotiated rationally and according to the standards of law, it lacks those values that make the case into a good story in the first place.
Archive | 2010
Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2011
Peter Hühn; Hartmut Bleumer; Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2011
Burkhard Hasebrink; Hartmut Bleumer; Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2015
Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2012
Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2011
Hartmut Bleumer; Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2011
Michael Bernsen; Hartmut Bleumer; Caroline Emmelius
Archive | 2011
Dietmar Rieger; Hartmut Bleumer; Caroline Emmelius