Description

Book Synopsis
Image and the Office of the Dead in Late Medieval Europe explores the Office of the Dead as a site of interaction between text, image, and experience in the culture of commemoration that thrived in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The Office of the Dead was a familiar liturgical ritual, and its perceived importance and utility are evident in its regular inclusion in devotional compilations, which crossed the boundaries between lay and religious readers. The Office was present in all medieval deaths: as a focus for private contemplation, a site of public performance, a reassuring ritual, and a voice for the bereaved. Examining the images at the Office of the Dead and related written, visual, and material evidence, this book explores the relationship of these images to the text in which they are embedded and to the broader experiences of and aspirations for death.

Table of Contents
Figures
Introduction
The Office of the Dead in Christian Liturgy
The Office of the Dead in Devotional Books
Regular Death: Reading the Funeral and Imaginative Practice
Seeing into the Office: Imagining
Reader as Body
Hearing Community: Image and Liturgy
Repellent Death: Time, Rot and the Death of the Body
Death-tide: Time and decay of the body
‘Nothing more base and abominable’: The Corpse
Disruption: The Lively Corpse
Dry Bones: Death in Life
The Redemptive Death: Job, Lazarus and Death Undone
Living Death: Job as the Social Body
The Undead: Lazarus and the Promise of Resurrection
Conclusions
Bibliography
Bibliography: Manuscripts

Image and the Office of the Dead in Late Medieval

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A Hardback by Sarah Schell

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    View other formats and editions of Image and the Office of the Dead in Late Medieval by Sarah Schell

    Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
    Publication Date: 09/10/2023
    ISBN13: 9789463722117, 978-9463722117
    ISBN10: 9463722114

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Image and the Office of the Dead in Late Medieval Europe explores the Office of the Dead as a site of interaction between text, image, and experience in the culture of commemoration that thrived in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The Office of the Dead was a familiar liturgical ritual, and its perceived importance and utility are evident in its regular inclusion in devotional compilations, which crossed the boundaries between lay and religious readers. The Office was present in all medieval deaths: as a focus for private contemplation, a site of public performance, a reassuring ritual, and a voice for the bereaved. Examining the images at the Office of the Dead and related written, visual, and material evidence, this book explores the relationship of these images to the text in which they are embedded and to the broader experiences of and aspirations for death.

    Table of Contents
    Figures
    Introduction
    The Office of the Dead in Christian Liturgy
    The Office of the Dead in Devotional Books
    Regular Death: Reading the Funeral and Imaginative Practice
    Seeing into the Office: Imagining
    Reader as Body
    Hearing Community: Image and Liturgy
    Repellent Death: Time, Rot and the Death of the Body
    Death-tide: Time and decay of the body
    ‘Nothing more base and abominable’: The Corpse
    Disruption: The Lively Corpse
    Dry Bones: Death in Life
    The Redemptive Death: Job, Lazarus and Death Undone
    Living Death: Job as the Social Body
    The Undead: Lazarus and the Promise of Resurrection
    Conclusions
    Bibliography
    Bibliography: Manuscripts

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