České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography
This article resumes research on the so-called Rorate chants, that is to say on the chants connected with morning Votive Mass in honor of the Virgin Mary in Advent, otherwise known as the Rorate Mass after its incipit. The central aim of this article is to present the Rorate chants as an interesti...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | ces |
Published: |
Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakulta
2019-12-01
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Series: | Slovo a Smysl |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://wordandsense.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/18/2019/12/Marie_Skarpova_127-160.pdf |
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author | Marie Škarpová |
author_facet | Marie Škarpová |
author_sort | Marie Škarpová |
collection | DOAJ |
description | This article resumes research on the so-called Rorate chants, that is to say on the chants connected
with morning Votive Mass in honor of the Virgin Mary in Advent, otherwise known as the Rorate
Mass after its incipit. The central aim of this article is to present the Rorate chants as an interesting topic for (Czech) literary historiography as well as comparative hymnology. One may well point
out that the polymedial nature of Rorate chants directly suggests an interdisciplinary approach. In
the case of the Czech tradition, however, this only puts into sharper relief the imbalance of scholarship across the hymnological disciplines. On the one hand, one is struck by the almost total absence of research on literary historiography; in the first part of the article, we analyze how and under what circumstances Czech literary historians have excluded Rorate chants from Czech literary
studies. On the other hand, one finds a rather long history of musicological research, which, conversely, has carved out an important place for the Rorate chants in the history of Czech music, going so far as to establish them as a characteristically Czech musical form. What the Czech Rorate
chants seem to offer Czech society, as we show in the second part of the article, is a certain potential for self-identification — a potential that has manifested itself, at various times and with varying intensity, in a tendency to identify the Rorate chants as a product of a national past and as one of
the nation’s identifying features. However, the creation of a specific vocal repertoire for the Rorate
Mass is also documented in other (Central) European regions. The third part of our essay seeks to
answer the question: how significantly does the Czech Rorate tradition differ from its counterparts?
The difference between the various Rorate traditions cannot be understood (merely) with respect to a language traditionally characterized by monolingually defined national philologies. It is therefore possible to study the Czech Rorate tradition in the context of a pan-European process made up
of various church denominations in the early modern period — that is, by investigating the Czech
Rorate chants from the perspective of denominational liturgies, in reference to a particular church
polity or corresponding socio-cultural context. |
first_indexed | 2024-12-12T19:51:04Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-c6a5bb4d58474b598cf1d75371164e77 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 1214-7915 2336-6680 |
language | ces |
last_indexed | 2024-12-12T19:51:04Z |
publishDate | 2019-12-01 |
publisher | Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakulta |
record_format | Article |
series | Slovo a Smysl |
spelling | doaj.art-c6a5bb4d58474b598cf1d75371164e772022-12-22T00:13:58ZcesUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaSlovo a Smysl1214-79152336-66802019-12-01163212716010.14712/23366680.2019.2.4České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary HistoriographyMarie ŠkarpováThis article resumes research on the so-called Rorate chants, that is to say on the chants connected with morning Votive Mass in honor of the Virgin Mary in Advent, otherwise known as the Rorate Mass after its incipit. The central aim of this article is to present the Rorate chants as an interesting topic for (Czech) literary historiography as well as comparative hymnology. One may well point out that the polymedial nature of Rorate chants directly suggests an interdisciplinary approach. In the case of the Czech tradition, however, this only puts into sharper relief the imbalance of scholarship across the hymnological disciplines. On the one hand, one is struck by the almost total absence of research on literary historiography; in the first part of the article, we analyze how and under what circumstances Czech literary historians have excluded Rorate chants from Czech literary studies. On the other hand, one finds a rather long history of musicological research, which, conversely, has carved out an important place for the Rorate chants in the history of Czech music, going so far as to establish them as a characteristically Czech musical form. What the Czech Rorate chants seem to offer Czech society, as we show in the second part of the article, is a certain potential for self-identification — a potential that has manifested itself, at various times and with varying intensity, in a tendency to identify the Rorate chants as a product of a national past and as one of the nation’s identifying features. However, the creation of a specific vocal repertoire for the Rorate Mass is also documented in other (Central) European regions. The third part of our essay seeks to answer the question: how significantly does the Czech Rorate tradition differ from its counterparts? The difference between the various Rorate traditions cannot be understood (merely) with respect to a language traditionally characterized by monolingually defined national philologies. It is therefore possible to study the Czech Rorate tradition in the context of a pan-European process made up of various church denominations in the early modern period — that is, by investigating the Czech Rorate chants from the perspective of denominational liturgies, in reference to a particular church polity or corresponding socio-cultural context.https://wordandsense.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/18/2019/12/Marie_Skarpova_127-160.pdfrorate chantsrorate massmatinsadventchant with melodic and textual tropinghymnologyearly modern literature |
spellingShingle | Marie Škarpová České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography Slovo a Smysl rorate chants rorate mass matins advent chant with melodic and textual troping hymnology early modern literature |
title | České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography |
title_full | České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography |
title_fullStr | České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography |
title_full_unstemmed | České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography |
title_short | České roráty. K dezideratům a výzvám českého literárního dějepisectví | Czech Rorate Chants: On the Desiderata and Challenges of Czech Literary Historiography |
title_sort | ceske roraty k dezideratum a vyzvam ceskeho literarniho dejepisectvi czech rorate chants on the desiderata and challenges of czech literary historiography |
topic | rorate chants rorate mass matins advent chant with melodic and textual troping hymnology early modern literature |
url | https://wordandsense.ff.cuni.cz/wp-content/uploads/sites/18/2019/12/Marie_Skarpova_127-160.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv | AT marieskarpova ceskeroratykdezideratumavyzvamceskeholiterarnihodejepisectviczechroratechantsonthedesiderataandchallengesofczechliteraryhistoriography |