Acheter 10 livres pour 10 € ici !
Bookbot

Edelgard E. DuBruck

    La Passion Isabeau
    Aspects of fifteenth century society in the German carnival comedies
    Death and dying in the middle ages
    • Death and dying in the middle ages

      • 515pages
      • 19 heures de lecture
      4,4(6)Évaluer

      Sums up the burgeoning scholarship over the past half century in a number of disciplines. The 18 essays cover facts, testimony, and ritual; Christian eschatology and thanatology; miracles, conversions, and transmutations sub specie aeternitatis; late Medieval poetry and drama on death; and late Medieval iconography on the art of death. Specific topics include the doctor, Aquinas' dilemma about knowledge after death, and women saints as helpers in dying.

      Death and dying in the middle ages
    • This study examines two fields of research: German society of the fifteenth century, and its carnival comedies. This is a detailed treatment of the four classes (peasants, urban middle class, clergy, and nobility), including such aspects as health, the self and its historicity, and general rules of conduct. The German carnival plays are valuable literary texts allowing insight into fifteenth-century life. This book examines most of the 127 comedies in the Keller collection, listed in one of the indices, and provides translations of all quotations into modern English. It also contains a synoptic tabulation of the Nurnberg plays, valuable to both drama specialists and medievalists.

      Aspects of fifteenth century society in the German carnival comedies