Journalartikel
Autorenliste: Hentschel, Frank
Jahr der Veröffentlichung: 2011
Seiten: 1-29
Zeitschrift: Plainsong & Medieval Music
Bandnummer: 20
ISSN: 0961-1371
eISSN: 1474-0087
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0961137110000173
Verlag: Cambridge University Press
Abstract:
Using well-known texts by Augustine, Jacques de Liege and Guido of Arezzo, this article tries to show that, despite prior misunderstandings, medieval authors of music theory considered it a given that sensuous pleasure was the ultimate goal of music. Only by way of anachronistic readings of the sources have historians constructed an aesthetics that blended aesthetics with mathematical and theological ideas. A close reading of the sources, taking into account their cultural contexts, reveals the intentions of the authors that are at the root of the texts. Those intentions, it is argued, were not aesthetical, and any attempt to interpret them from such a perspective would be misleading. Yet careful consideration of those intentions opens the view for remarks that are truly aesthetical as well as for hints suggesting that aesthetical judgements, while self-evident, were not considered matters for written discourse but for orality.
Zitierstile
Harvard-Zitierstil: Hentschel, F. (2011) The sensuous music aesthetics of the Middle Ages: the cases of Augustine, Jacques de Liege and Guido of Arezzo, Plainsong & Medieval Music, 20, pp. 1-29. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0961137110000173
APA-Zitierstil: Hentschel, F. (2011). The sensuous music aesthetics of the Middle Ages: the cases of Augustine, Jacques de Liege and Guido of Arezzo. Plainsong & Medieval Music. 20, 1-29. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0961137110000173
Schlagwörter
TRADITION