'The little pipe sings sweetly while the fowler deceives the bird': sirens in the later Middle Ages
The figure of the siren in the Renaissance and later has attracted a good deal of attention, especially from scholars interested in the history of gender. but the role of sirens in the Middle Ages has received much less consideration, at least from musicologists. The siren serves as a metaphor for h...
Autor Principal: | Leach, EE |
---|---|
Formato: | Journal article |
Idioma: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2006
|
Subjects: |
Títulos similares
-
Sung birds: music, nature, and poetry in the later Middle Ages
por: Leach, E
Publicado: (2007) -
Learning French by singing in 14th-century England
por: Leach, EE
Publicado: (2005) -
Sirens’ Songs and Music: Their Representations and Significance on Archaic and Classical Attic Vase-Paintings
por: Angeliki Liveri
Publicado: (2024-03-01) -
Sounding the Nonhuman in Joyce’s “Sirens”
por: Rasheed Tazudeen
Publicado: (2017-08-01) -
Al-Ghazali music and singing /
por: MacDonald, Duncan Black
Publicado: (2009)