Where Sound and Meaning part Language and Performance in Early Hebrew Poetry

Authors
Publication date 2018
Host editors
  • B. Hellemans
  • A. Jones Nelson
Book title Images, Improvisations, Sound, and Silence from 1000 to 1800 - Degree Zero
ISBN
  • 9789462980051
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9789048529186
Series Knowledge Communities
Pages (from-to) 177-188
Number of pages 12
Publisher Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School of Historical Studies (ASH)
Abstract
This chapter addresses the discrepancies between writing, reading,
listening, and performing in two Jewish genres: biblical verse and early
synagogue poetry. The continuities (scriptural canonicity, diglossia, tensions between constraint and play) are obvious. The poetics, by contrast, difffer. If we want to understand this variance, we must examine what happens in the dialogue between the scribe and his empty scroll, between the cantor and his perplexed congregation. How did they juggle the disparate privileges of sound and meaning, of private understanding and communal experience? As we shall see, in the silence that preceded the sound, and in the sound that followed, the poet’s inner and outer speech articulated diffferent poetics – sometimes disrupting, sometimes reinforcing the conventions of the holy Hebrew tongue.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Other links https://www.aup.nl/nl/book/9789462980051/images-improvisations-sound-and-silence-from-1000-to-1800-degree-zero
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