Results for 'Aldeburgh Festival of Music and the Arts'

982 found
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  1.  23
    Sung Poems and Poetic Songs: Hellenistic Definitions of Poetry, Music and the Spaces in Between.Spencer A. Klavan - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (2):597-615.
    Simply by formulating a question about the nature of ancient Greek poetry or music, any modern English speaker is already risking anachronism. In recent years especially, scholars have reminded one another that the words ‘music’ and ‘poetry’ denote concepts with no easy counterpart in Greek. μουσική in its broadest sense evokes not only innumerable kinds of structured movement and sound but also the political, psychological and cosmic order of which song, verse and dance are supposed to be perceptible (...)
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  2.  56
    The place of touch in the arts.Christopher Perricone - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (1):90-104.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Place of Touch in the ArtsChristopher Perricone (bio)IntroductionIn Breughel's great picture, The Kermess, the dancers go round, they go round and around, the squeal and the blare and the tweedle of bagpipes, a bugle and fiddles tipping their bellies (round as the thick- sided glasses whose wash they impound) their hips and their bellies off balance to turn them. Kicking and rolling about the Fair Grounds, swinging their (...)
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  3.  43
    The magic of tone and the art of music.Dane Rudhyar - 1982 - [s.l.]: Distributed in the United States by Random House.
    Communication: Man's Primordial Need ORGANIC LIFE IN THE EARTH'S biosphere requires organisms to relate to other organisms. Human beings are particularly ...
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  4.  13
    The Aesthetics of Enchantment in the Fine Arts.Marlies Kronegger, Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka & Fine Arts Aesthetics American Society for Phenomenology - 2000 - Springer Verlag.
    Published under the auspices of The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning, 19 essays document the April 1998 international congress held at Harvard University. They ponder on such topics as the phenomenology of the experience of enchantment, Leonardo's enchantress, the ambiguous meaning of musical enchantment in Kant's Third Critique, art and the reenchantment of sensuous human activity, the creative voice, the allure of the Naza, Henri Matisse's early critical reception in New York, Zizek's sublimicist aesthetic of enchanted fantasy, (...)
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  5.  45
    Schopenhauer, the Philosophy of Music, and the Wisdom of Classical Indian Philosophy.Richard White - 2021 - Sophia 60 (4):899-915.
    Among Western philosophers, Schopenhauer is one of the few who seeks to clarify the nature of music, and its effects upon us. He claims that music is the most important of all the arts; and he argues that music is a kind of metaphysics that allows us to experience the ultimate reality of the world. In this essay, I evaluate Schopenhauer’s philosophy of music in the context of his overarching philosophy. Then I discuss the relevance (...)
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  6.  80
    Meaning and the art-status of ‘music alone’.Graham Mcfee - 1997 - British Journal of Aesthetics 37 (1):31-46.
  7. The Oxford handbook of music and the middlebrow.Kate Guthrie & Christopher Chowrimootoo (eds.) - 2024 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The Oxford Handbook of Music and the Middlebrow takes a fresh look at the history of nineteenth- and twentieth-century music. Offering an alternative to the traditional focus on either "highbrow" modernism on the one hand or "lowbrow" popular music on the other, its novel view centers on the wealth of previously overlooked products and practices that bridged the space between these cultural extremes. While seminal attempts to recover middlebrow culture came from literary critics and historians, middlebrow studies (...)
     
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  8. Music and the Plastic Arts in Conquest of Time and Space.Tadeusx Kowzan & Robert Blohm - 1971 - Diogenes 19 (73):1-20.
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  9. The place of music among the arts.W. H. Hadow - 1933 - Oxford: The Clarendon press.
     
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  10.  96
    Conflict of Interest in the Fyre Festival Documentaries.April Newton - 2020 - Journal of Media Ethics 39 (2):131-134.
    It should come as no surprise that a music and arts festival dogged by scandal would lead to two separate documentaries that each raise ethical concerns. The 2017 demise of the Fyre Festival, a would-be luxury music event in the Bahamas targeted at millennials, inspired late-night comedians’ jokes, social media schadenfreude and so far, two documentaries detailing how things went so wrong. Both films detail the maddening twists and turns during the preparations for the Fyre (...)
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  11.  9
    Music and the myth of wholeness: toward a new aesthetic paradigm.Tim Hodgkinson - 2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    A new theory of aesthetics and music, grounded in the collision between language and the body. In this book, Tim Hodgkinson proposes a theory of aesthetics and music grounded in the boundary between nature and culture within the human being. His analysis discards the conventional idea of the human being as an integrated whole in favor of a rich and complex field in which incompatible kinds of information—biological and cultural—collide. It is only when we acknowledge the clash of (...)
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  12.  18
    Genealogies of Music and Memory: Gluck in the Nineteenth-Century Parisian Imagination.James H. Johnson - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (2):239-241.
    The music of Christoph Willibald von Gluck was a revolution for Paris operagoers when his work premiered there in 1774. In a setting known for its restive and often rowdy spectators, Alceste, Iphigénie en Aulide, and Orpheé et Eurydice seized audiences with unprecedented force. They shed silent tears or sobbed openly, and some cried out in sympathy with the sufferers onstage. “Oh Mama! This is too painful!” three girls called out as Charon led Alcestis to the underworld, and a (...)
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  13.  18
    The aesthetics of imperfection in music and the arts: spontaneity, flaws and the unfinished.Andy Hamilton & Lara Pearson (eds.) - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    The aesthetics of imperfection emphasises spontaneity, disruption, process and energy over formal perfection and is often ignored by many commentators or seen only in improvisation. This comprehensive collection is the first time imperfection has been explored across all kinds of musical performance, whether improvisation or interpretation of compositions. Covering music, visual art, dance, comedy, architecture and design, it addresses the meaning, experience, and value of improvisation and spontaneous creation across different artistic media. A distinctive feature of the volume is (...)
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  14.  20
    Cambridge Handbook of the Psychology of Aesthetics and the Arts.Pablo P. L. Tinio & Jeffrey K. Smith (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The psychology of aesthetics and the arts is dedicated to the study of our experiences of the visual arts, music, literature, film, performances, architecture and design; our experiences of beauty and ugliness; our preferences and dislikes; and our everyday perceptions of things in our world. The Cambridge Handbook of the Psychology of Aesthetics and the Arts is a foundational volume presenting an overview of the key concepts and theories of the discipline where readers can learn about (...)
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  15. Pleasure and the arts: enjoying literature, painting, and music.Christopher Butler - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    How do the arts give us pleasure? Covering a very wide range of artistic works, from Auden to David Lynch, Rembrandt to Edward Weston, and Richard Strauss to Keith Jarrett, Pleasure and the Arts offers us an explanation of our enjoyable emotional engagements with literature, music, and painting. The arts direct us to intimate and particularized relationships, with the people represented in the works, or with those we imagine produced them. When we listen to music, (...)
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  16. Kant on music and the hierarchy of the arts.Herman Parret - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (3):251-264.
  17.  9
    Music and the comrade arts: their relation.Hugh Archibald Clarke - 1899 - Boston, New York [etc.]: Silver, Burdett and company.
    Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
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  18. Music and the aural arts.Andy Hamilton - 2007 - British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (1):46-63.
    The visual arts include painting, sculpture, photography, video, and film. But many people would argue that music is the universal or only art of sound. In the modernist era, Western art music has incorporated unpitched sounds or ‘noise’, and I pursue the question of whether this process allows space for a non-musical soundart. Are there non-musical arts of sound—is there an art phonography, for instance, to parallel art photography? At the same time, I attempt a characterization (...)
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  19.  35
    Music, Meaning, and the Art of Elocution.Elizabeth Anne Trott - 1990 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 24 (2):91.
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  20.  24
    Music and the aesthetics of modernity: essays.Karol Berger, Anthony Newcomb & Reinhold Brinkmann (eds.) - 2005 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    This book encourages a debate over musical modernity; a debate considering the question whether an examination of the history of European art music may enrich our picture of modernity and whether our understanding of music's development may be transformed by insights into the nature of modernity provided by other historical disciplines.
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  21.  10
    Time and the art of living.Robert Grudin - 1982 - New York: Ticknor & Fields.
    This is a book about time--about one's own journey through it and, more important, about enlarging the pleasure one takes in that journey. It's about memory of the past, hope and fear for the future, and how they color, for better and for worse, one's experience of the present. Ultimately, it's a book about freedom--freedom from despair of the clock, of the aging body, of the seeming waste of one's daily routine, the freedom that comes with acceptance and appreciation of (...)
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  22.  62
    Music and the Dignity of Difference.June Boyce-Tillman - 2012 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 20 (1):25.
    This paper will critique the values embedded in the Western classical tradition from a Foucauldian perspective. It will identify issues of power as a central problem for Western culture which is developing into a monoculture in which many people are disempowered. It identifies the role of the dialogic imagination in challenging the dominant culture and how this might inform work with children. It will see a way forward as the valuing of difference, drawing on the work of Martin Buber, Emmanuel (...)
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  23. The crisis in western music and the human roots of art.F. G. Asenjo - 1971 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 29 (4):529-535.
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  24.  40
    The Work of Music and the Problem of Its Identity.Peter Kivy - 1987 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 45 (4):413-415.
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  25. Sound art, music and the rehabilitation of schizophonia.Thomas Gardner - 2014 - In Taina Riikonen & Marjaana Virtanen (eds.), The embodiment of authority: perspectives on performances. New York: Peter Lang.
     
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  26.  24
    Must We Choose between Democracy and Music? On a Curious Silence in Tocqueville's Democracy in America.Damien Mahiet - 2014 - History of European Ideas 40 (3):360-380.
    Summary‘Among the fine arts, I clearly see something to say only about architecture, sculpture, painting. As for music, dance […], I see nothing’. Tocqueville's observation in the Rubish for the second volume of Democracy in America is not only startling, but theoretically important: it ratifies the liberal (and nowadays oft-assumed) separation between musical life and political constitution. This, however, should give us cause to wonder. While in America, Tocqueville and Beaumont had multiple occasions to hear music in (...)
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  27.  7
    Book Review of Music and Mind: Harnessing the Arts for Health and Wellness, edited by Renée Fleming. New York: Viking, 2024. [REVIEW]Eric Persaud - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Humanities:1-2.
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  28.  10
    Boring formless nonsense: experimental music and the aesthetics of failure.Edritch Priest - 2013 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Boring Formless Nonsense intervenes in an aesthetics of failure that has largely been delimited by the visual arts and its avant-garde legacies. It focuses on contemporary experimental composition in which failure rubs elbows with the categories of chance, noise, and obscurity. In these works we hear failure anew. We hear boredom, formlessness, and nonsense in a way that gives new purchase to aesthetic, philosophical, and ethical questions that falter in their negative capability. Reshaping current debates on failure as an (...)
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  29. Music and the Emotions: The Philosophical Theories.Malcolm Budd - 1985 - Boston: Routledge.
    It has often been claimed, and frequently denied, that music derives some or all of its artistic value from the relation in which it stands to the emotions. This book presents and subjects to critical examination the chief theories about the relationship between the art of music and the emotions.
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  30.  60
    Music and the idea of progress.Warren Dwight Allen - 1946 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 4 (3):166-180.
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  31.  68
    Absolute music and the construction of meaning.Daniel K. L. Chua - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book is born out of two contradictions: first, it explores the making of meaning in a musical form that was made to lose its meaning at the turn of the nineteenth century; secondly, it is a history of a music that claims to have no history - absolute music. The book therefore writes against that notion of absolute music which tends to be the paradigm for most musicological and analytical studies. It is concerned not so much (...)
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  32.  10
    Cognition and the Arts: From Naturalized Aesthetics to the Cognitive Humanities.Timothy Justus - forthcoming - Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
    How does the mind lend itself to artistic creation and appreciation? How should we study minds and arts in ways that transform our understanding of both? This book examines the concepts of art and cognition from the complementary perspectives of philosophy, the empirical sciences, and the humanities. Central chapters combine examples of visual art, music, literature, and film with the properties of cognition that they illuminate, including 4E cognition, predictive processing, and theories of affect and emotion. These aspects (...)
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  33. Nigerian Music and the Black Diaspora in the USA : African Identity, Black Power, and the Free Jazz of the 1960s.Martin A. M. Gansinger & Ayman Kole - 2016 - In Martin A. M. Gansinger & Ayman Kole (eds.), From Tribal to Digital - Effects of Tradition and Modernity on Nigerian Media and Culture. Scholars Press. pp. 15-44.
    This article is the attempt of an historically oriented analysis focused on the role of Nigerian music as a cultural hub for the export of African cultural influences into the Black diaspora in the United States and its anticipation by the Free Jazz/Avantgarde-scene as well as the import of key-values related to the Black Power-movement to the African continent. The aim is to demonstrate the leading role and international impact of Nigeria's cultural industry among sub-saharan African nation states and (...)
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  34.  39
    Review of phenomenology and the arts, ed. Peter R. Costello and Licia Carlson. [REVIEW]Christine Rojcewicz - 2018 - Continental Philosophy Review 51 (2):289-294.
    Through an exploration of the arts, Phenomenology and the Arts traces the relationship between phenomenology qua historical movement and qua descriptive method. Serving as an artistic undertaking, the phenomenological method itself echoes its content when describing artistic matters such as painting, drama, literature, and music. After establishing the thematics and structure of the volume, contributors analyze in rich and groundbreaking ways specifically Kant, Hegel, Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and Derrida, and works of art, including select jazz composers, the (...)
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  35.  19
    Music and the Ineffable: The Case for Profundity in Music.Jürgen Lawrenz - 2023 - The European Legacy 28 (5):503-518.
    In this article we confront the ineffability of music to seek out a tenable conception of profound depths being plumbed in many such works. We take our initial bearings from the writings of the late Peter Kivy, who was a musically trained thinker and tackled the subject no less than four times. Our main interest lies in his outright dismissal of the idea. However, the scaffolding of his arguments reveals that he privileges the discursive metier without any evidence in (...)
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  36. Walter Pater on the place of music among the arts.Max Schoen - 1942 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 2 (6):12-23.
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  37.  30
    Physics and metaphysics of music and essays on the philosophy of mathematics.Lazare Saminsky - 1957 - The Hague: M. Nijhoff.
    A green philosopher's peripeteia.--Physics and metaphysics of music.--The roots of arithmetic.--Critique of new geometrical abstractions.--The philosophical value of science.
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  38. Zen and the art of la Monte Young.Melissa Warak - 2011 - In Charlotte De Mille (ed.), Music and modernism, c. 1849-1950. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
     
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  39. Bioshock and the art of rapture.Grant Tavinor - 2009 - Philosophy and Literature 33 (1):pp. 91-106.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Bioshock and the Art of RaptureGrant TavinorI am Andrew Ryan, and I am here to ask you a question. Is a man not entitled to the sweat of his brow? "No!" says the man in Washington, "It belongs to the poor." "No!" says the man in the Vatican, "It belongs to God." "No!" says the man in Moscow, "It belongs to everyone." I rejected these answers; instead, I chose (...)
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  40.  25
    The Puzzle of Music and Emotion in Rand's Aesthetics.Randall R. Dipert - 2001 - Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 2 (2):387 - 394.
    Randall R. Dipert argues that, at first glance, Rand's view of representational arts, such as literature and the visual arts, might seem to have little applicability to pure music. Nevertheless, Rand took music without words as a serious art form, and struggled to develop a plausible theory of music. As Torres and Kamhi note in What Art Is, Rand's approach probably contradicted certain elements of her full aesthetic theory. But her theory of music and (...)
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  41. The Significance of Music for the Moral and Spiritual Cultivation of Virtue.David Carr - 2006 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 14 (2):103-117.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Significance of Music for the Moral and Spiritual Cultivation of VirtueDavid CarrIs There any Virtue in Music?Given its time-honored place, along with other arts, in many if not most past and present school curricula it would seem that at least some forms of music have been widely credited with educational value. Beyond the general association of music with high culture and, notwithstanding the (...)
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  42.  30
    On the Music of the Spheres: Unifying Religion and the Arts.Diane Apostolos-Cappadona - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review.
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  43.  25
    Music and the Aesthetic Copernican Revolution of the Eighteenth Century.Jürgen Lawrenz - 2020 - The European Legacy 25 (2):186-202.
    In the mid-eighteenth century music underwent a sudden and drastic revolution when composers “discovered” a new dimension to their art. This had immense repercussions on the philosophy of art, for the music created before and after this divide represents two different species of aesthetic experience, which in due course affected our understanding of the meaning and import of the other arts as well. Despite the immense aesthetic repercussions of this Copernican revolution in music, philosophers of art (...)
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  44. Music and the Experience of Timelessness.Brian Luke - 2007 - In Jan Lloyd Jones (ed.), Art and Time. Australian Scholarly Publishing. pp. 314.
     
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  45.  15
    Experimenting the human: art, music, and the contemporary posthuman.G. Douglas Barrett - 2023 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    An engaging argument about what experimental music can tell us about being human. -/- In Experimenting the Human, G Douglas Barrett argues that experimental music speaks to the contemporary posthuman, a condition in which science and technology decenter human agency amid the uneven temporality of postwar global capitalism. Time moves forward for some during this period, while it seems to stand still or even move backward for others. Some say we’re already posthuman, while others endure the extended consequences (...)
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  46.  12
    Deleuze on Music, Painting, and the Arts.Ronald Bogue - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    First published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  47. Seduction and Spirituality: The Ambiguous Roles of Music in Venetian Art.Patricia Fortini Brown - 2012 - In Fortini Brown Patricia (ed.), The Music Room in Early Modern France and Italy: Sound, Space and Object. pp. 19.
     
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  48. The Missing Link / Monument for the Distribution of Wealth (Johannesburg, 2010).Vincent W. J. Van Gerven Oei & Jonas Staal - 2011 - Continent 1 (4):242-252.
    continent. 1.4 (2011): 242—252. Introduction The following two works were produced by visual artist Jonas Staal and writer Vincent W.J. van Gerven Oei during a visit as artists in residence at The Bag Factory, Johannesburg, South Africa during the summer of 2010. Both works were produced in situ and comprised in both cases a public intervention conceived by Staal and a textual work conceived by Van Gerven Oei. It was their aim, in both cases, to produce complementary works that could (...)
     
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  49. Medicine and the arts.John Stone - 1985 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 6 (3).
    Three years' experience in teaching a course in Literature and Medicine is reviewed. Examples of the Laboratory or in vitro functions of art are given, as they relate to and benefit both medical students and practitioners. The usefulness of literature (especially) in the medical setting is underscored, together with the need for medical personnel to be more aware of their heritage in this area. Examples of well-known physicians who have excelled in the arts (literature, music, painting/sculpture) are given (...)
     
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  50.  46
    Magnificence and the sublime in Medieval aesthetics: art, architecture, literature, music.C. Stephen Jaeger (ed.) - 2010 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    These essays recover the lively discussions on the topics of "magnificence" and "the sublime" in the art and literature of antiquity, the Renaissance, and the ages following, and apply them to the Middle Ages to draw exciting new conlusions"--Provided by publisher.
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