Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: The Role of Graphic Devices in Understanding the Early Decorated Book
- I Graphic Devices in the Early Medieval Book: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on a Complex Phenomenon
- II Insular and Carolingian Graphicacy: Shared Practices in Divergent Settings
- III Contrast and Commonality: Byzantine Manuscripts
- IV Embedding Graphic Devices in Understanding the Complete Codex: Externalization and Internalization
- Index
- Already Published
4 - Graphic Visualization in Liturgical Manuscripts in the Early Middle Ages: The Initial ‘O’ in the Sacramentary of Gellone
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: The Role of Graphic Devices in Understanding the Early Decorated Book
- I Graphic Devices in the Early Medieval Book: Cross-Cultural Perspectives on a Complex Phenomenon
- II Insular and Carolingian Graphicacy: Shared Practices in Divergent Settings
- III Contrast and Commonality: Byzantine Manuscripts
- IV Embedding Graphic Devices in Understanding the Complete Codex: Externalization and Internalization
- Index
- Already Published
Summary
In memory of Florentine Mütherich
In recent years, many medievalists have become interested in the place of the five senses in the Christian culture of the Middle Ages. Having long been neglected, despite the pioneering work of some authors, the five senses now feature in studies by medieval historians, specialists in literature and philosophy and, more recently, art historians. In the field of medieval liturgy, however, there are few publications which refer to the sensory aspect of ritual. Nor is there a comprehensive study of the role played by the five senses in the Christian liturgy of late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. To fill this gap, I have undertaken extensive research on art, liturgy and the five senses in the Middle Ages, which has resulted in a book which came out in 2014. In this research I considered art as an essential element of the definition of the liturgy, whose ‘function’ was primarily to activate the senses during the performance of the ritual in order to ‘produce’ the effect required by the theology of the liturgical ceremony.
This new approach to the place of art in medieval liturgy does not detract from the role of objects and their iconography in elaborating political and historical contexts during the ritual. Indeed, liturgical objects are essential elements of the ritual. Adopting this perspective allows one to escape from the strictly ‘utilitarian’ or ‘functional’ conception of art within liturgy, and to move instead towards a philosophical and theological understanding: the liturgy is brought within the realm of sensory experience, mainly expressed by the ‘placing’ of the ritual and its effective performance through all the elements which compose it – and most of all, art. This approach to the sensory world as part of the liturgy has similarities with the phenomenology of perception. That is, one must recognize the ‘sensory space’ par excellence of the Christian liturgy. The ‘sensory space’ of the liturgy is above all composed of elements which make a particular appeal to the senses (such as visual decorations and representations), brought into contiguity within the ritual sequences of a ceremony, and leading to an ‘inter-sensoriality’ or a ‘crossing over’ of sensory modalities.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Graphic Devices and the Early Decorated Book , pp. 63 - 79Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017