Alle Thyng Hath Tyme:时间与中世纪生活》,作者 Gillian Adler 和 Paul Strohm(评论)

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES
Marie Schilling Grogan
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Pp. 247. <small>isbn</small>: 978–1789146790. £16.95. <p>In this handsome volume from Reaktion Books’ Medieval Lives series, Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm limn the ways that medieval people experience, measure, and theorize time, arguing for ‘the subtlety and complexity of medieval time’ (p. 103) as a byproduct of the age’s rich array of temporalities. Expertly ranging from the cloister to the civic square, from Benedict’s <em>Rule</em> to Arthurian romance, incorporating forty-nine color plates and quotations from a wide range of literary sources, this volume provides an overview of its subject that is intended to be accessible to a general readership but also offers much to engage medievalists and philosophers of time.</p> <p>The book begins in ‘Varieties of Time,’ Chapter One, by examining the ‘colliding systems’ of time under which medieval people lived, especially the seasonal and the liturgical. Certainly, rural laborers experienced their days and year according to the diurnal movement of the sun and the annual cycle of changing seasons, but Adler and Strohm argue that agricultural rhythms were also shaped by the temporality of monastic life. The authors mine works of imagination such as <em>Pearl</em> and <em>Piers Plowman</em> for evidence that the world beyond the cloister adopted the language of the liturgical hours and calendar; and, indeed, for everyone, the pealing of church bells at regular hours was the ‘sound of time’ (p. 44).</p> <p>Chapter Two, ‘Measuring Time,’ explores medieval efforts to gauge the passage of time with a variety of ingenious devices—candles, sundials, water clocks— culminating in the invention of mechanical clocks that would revolutionize the human experience of time, especially as large tower clocks in cathedrals regulated commerce and other secular social activities in the public square. But the authors also emphasize that, while many have imagined the late medieval advent of the mechanical clock as a modernizing moment, it is in fact the natural development of the long monastic history of time measurement. Chapter Three, ‘Time and the Planets,’ looks to the heavens to explore medieval understandings of how astral and planetary positions affected human life. Paying particular attention to the popularity—at least in courtly circles—of astrolabes and miscellanies devoted to astrology and time measurement, Adler and Strohm demonstrate a widespread belief that the order of the cosmos both reflected and influenced earthly experience. Of course, Chaucer’s <em>Treatise on the Astrolabe</em> illustrates this fascination; the chapter also considers the prevalence of <strong>[End Page 97]</strong> the zodiac and other astrological referents in a range of medieval texts to chart the widespread belief that every human life was to some degree regulated by cosmic forces.</p> <p>The next two chapters take a closer look at some well-known medieval texts (as well as a few lesser-known works) to examine how theories of time shape both fictional and non-fictional narrative structures. ‘Lives in Time,’ Chapter Four, revisits the real-life testimonies of Julian of Norwich, Margery Kempe, and Thomas Usk, paying attention to their expressed concerns with how well they have ‘managed’ the time each has been given to serve God (Julian and Margery) or the king (Usk); this much-debated question of the ‘duration’ of service as a factor in achieving sanctity is raised in the difficult parable of the workers in the vineyard (Matthew 20:1–16). Chapter Five, ‘Timescapes: Narrative Shapes in Time,’ explores how episodes in Chaucer’s <em>Troilus and Criseyde</em> and Malory’s <em>Morte Darthur</em> exploit the ‘supple time-sense’ (p. 121) of medieval temporality. Strohm and Adler are both Chaucerians and one of the delights of the volume is to re-visit several of Chaucer’s works with their guidance.</p> <p>Chapter Six, ‘Allegories of Time,’ reminds readers that allegorical representations of time-related concepts abound in the medieval imagination: the virtue Temperance, for instance, often depicted with a clock to abet moderation; Fortune with her wheel of inescapable change; dancing Death, that grim figure betokening the end for every life. ‘Ages of Humankind,’ Chapter Seven...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":43123,"journal":{"name":"Arthuriana","volume":"52 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Alle Thyng Hath Tyme: Time and Medieval Life by Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm (review)\",\"authors\":\"Marie Schilling Grogan\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/art.2024.a924601\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Alle Thyng Hath Tyme: Time and Medieval Life</em> by Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Marie Schilling Grogan </li> </ul> <small>dillian adler</small> and <small>paul strohm</small>, <em>Alle Thyng Hath Tyme: Time and Medieval Life</em>. Medieval Lives Series. London: Reaktion Books, 2023. Pp. 247. <small>isbn</small>: 978–1789146790. £16.95. <p>In this handsome volume from Reaktion Books’ Medieval Lives series, Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm limn the ways that medieval people experience, measure, and theorize time, arguing for ‘the subtlety and complexity of medieval time’ (p. 103) as a byproduct of the age’s rich array of temporalities. Expertly ranging from the cloister to the civic square, from Benedict’s <em>Rule</em> to Arthurian romance, incorporating forty-nine color plates and quotations from a wide range of literary sources, this volume provides an overview of its subject that is intended to be accessible to a general readership but also offers much to engage medievalists and philosophers of time.</p> <p>The book begins in ‘Varieties of Time,’ Chapter One, by examining the ‘colliding systems’ of time under which medieval people lived, especially the seasonal and the liturgical. Certainly, rural laborers experienced their days and year according to the diurnal movement of the sun and the annual cycle of changing seasons, but Adler and Strohm argue that agricultural rhythms were also shaped by the temporality of monastic life. The authors mine works of imagination such as <em>Pearl</em> and <em>Piers Plowman</em> for evidence that the world beyond the cloister adopted the language of the liturgical hours and calendar; and, indeed, for everyone, the pealing of church bells at regular hours was the ‘sound of time’ (p. 44).</p> <p>Chapter Two, ‘Measuring Time,’ explores medieval efforts to gauge the passage of time with a variety of ingenious devices—candles, sundials, water clocks— culminating in the invention of mechanical clocks that would revolutionize the human experience of time, especially as large tower clocks in cathedrals regulated commerce and other secular social activities in the public square. But the authors also emphasize that, while many have imagined the late medieval advent of the mechanical clock as a modernizing moment, it is in fact the natural development of the long monastic history of time measurement. Chapter Three, ‘Time and the Planets,’ looks to the heavens to explore medieval understandings of how astral and planetary positions affected human life. Paying particular attention to the popularity—at least in courtly circles—of astrolabes and miscellanies devoted to astrology and time measurement, Adler and Strohm demonstrate a widespread belief that the order of the cosmos both reflected and influenced earthly experience. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: Alle Thyng Hath Tyme:吉莉安-阿德勒和保罗-斯特罗姆的《时间与中世纪生活》 玛丽-席林-格罗根 迪莉安-阿德勒和保罗-斯特罗姆的《时间与中世纪生活》:时间与中世纪生活》。中世纪生活系列。伦敦:伦敦:Reaktion Books,2023 年。第 247 页。订书号:978-1789146790。£16.95.在 Reaktion Books 的《中世纪生活》丛书中,吉莉安-阿德勒(Gillian Adler)和保罗-斯特罗姆(Paul Strohm)在这本精美的书中介绍了中世纪人们体验、测量和理论化时间的方式,认为 "中世纪时间的微妙性和复杂性"(第 103 页)是这个时代丰富的时间性的副产品。从回廊到市政广场,从本尼迪克特的规则到亚瑟王的浪漫故事,这本书以专业的视角,结合四十九幅彩色图片和大量文学作品中的引文,对其主题进行了概述,旨在让普通读者也能阅读,同时也为中世纪学者和时间哲学家提供了很多参考。本书在第一章 "时间的多样性 "中首先探讨了中世纪人们所生活的 "相互碰撞的时间体系",尤其是季节性和礼仪性的时间体系。当然,农村劳动者根据太阳的昼夜运动和季节变化的年轮来体验他们的一天和一年,但阿德勒和斯特罗姆认为,修道院生活的时间性也塑造了农业节奏。作者从《珍珠》和《皮尔斯-普洛曼》等想象力作品中找到证据,证明修道院以外的世界也采用了礼仪时间和日历的语言;事实上,对每个人来说,教堂在固定时间敲响的钟声就是 "时间的声音"(第 44 页)。第二章 "测量时间 "探讨了中世纪利用各种巧妙的装置--烛光、日晷、水钟--来测量时间流逝的努力,最终发明了机械钟,彻底改变了人类对时间的体验,尤其是大教堂中的大型塔钟规范了公共广场上的商业和其他世俗社会活动。但作者也强调,虽然许多人将中世纪晚期机械钟的出现想象成一个现代化的时刻,但它实际上是漫长的修道院时间测量历史的自然发展。第三章 "时间与行星 "将目光投向天空,探讨中世纪对星体和行星位置如何影响人类生活的理解。阿德勒和斯特罗姆特别关注星盘和专门用于占星术和时间测量的杂记的流行--至少在宫廷圈子里是这样,他们证明了一种普遍的信念,即宇宙的秩序既反映也影响着人间的经验。当然,乔叟的《星盘论》说明了这一魅力;本章还考虑了一系列中世纪文本中黄道十二宫和其他占星术的普遍性,从而描绘出人类生活在某种程度上受到宇宙力量调节的普遍信念。接下来的两章将仔细研究一些著名的中世纪文本(以及一些鲜为人知的作品),探讨时间理论如何塑造虚构和非虚构的叙事结构。第四章 "时间中的生命 "重温了诺威奇的朱利安、玛格丽-肯普和托马斯-乌斯克的真实见证,关注他们对各自被赋予侍奉上帝(朱利安和玛格丽)或国王(乌斯克)的时间 "管理 "得如何所表达的关切;葡萄园工人的寓言(《马太福音》20:1-16)中提出了这一备受争议的问题,即侍奉的 "持续时间 "是实现圣洁的一个因素。第五章 "时间景观:第五章 "时间景观:时间中的叙事形状 "探讨了乔叟的《特洛伊罗斯与克里塞德》和马洛里的《达瑟王》中的情节如何利用中世纪时间性的 "柔韧时间感"(第 121 页)。斯特罗姆和阿德勒都是乔叟研究者,在他们的指导下重新审视乔叟的多部作品,是本卷的一大乐趣。第六章 "时间的寓言 "提醒读者,在中世纪的想象中,与时间相关的概念的寓言表现比比皆是:例如,节制的美德经常被描绘成一个时钟,以帮助人们节制;财富与她不可避免的变化之轮;跳舞的死神,那个预示着每个人生命终结的严峻形象。人类的时代》,第七章...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Alle Thyng Hath Tyme: Time and Medieval Life by Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Alle Thyng Hath Tyme: Time and Medieval Life by Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm
  • Marie Schilling Grogan
dillian adler and paul strohm, Alle Thyng Hath Tyme: Time and Medieval Life. Medieval Lives Series. London: Reaktion Books, 2023. Pp. 247. isbn: 978–1789146790. £16.95.

In this handsome volume from Reaktion Books’ Medieval Lives series, Gillian Adler and Paul Strohm limn the ways that medieval people experience, measure, and theorize time, arguing for ‘the subtlety and complexity of medieval time’ (p. 103) as a byproduct of the age’s rich array of temporalities. Expertly ranging from the cloister to the civic square, from Benedict’s Rule to Arthurian romance, incorporating forty-nine color plates and quotations from a wide range of literary sources, this volume provides an overview of its subject that is intended to be accessible to a general readership but also offers much to engage medievalists and philosophers of time.

The book begins in ‘Varieties of Time,’ Chapter One, by examining the ‘colliding systems’ of time under which medieval people lived, especially the seasonal and the liturgical. Certainly, rural laborers experienced their days and year according to the diurnal movement of the sun and the annual cycle of changing seasons, but Adler and Strohm argue that agricultural rhythms were also shaped by the temporality of monastic life. The authors mine works of imagination such as Pearl and Piers Plowman for evidence that the world beyond the cloister adopted the language of the liturgical hours and calendar; and, indeed, for everyone, the pealing of church bells at regular hours was the ‘sound of time’ (p. 44).

Chapter Two, ‘Measuring Time,’ explores medieval efforts to gauge the passage of time with a variety of ingenious devices—candles, sundials, water clocks— culminating in the invention of mechanical clocks that would revolutionize the human experience of time, especially as large tower clocks in cathedrals regulated commerce and other secular social activities in the public square. But the authors also emphasize that, while many have imagined the late medieval advent of the mechanical clock as a modernizing moment, it is in fact the natural development of the long monastic history of time measurement. Chapter Three, ‘Time and the Planets,’ looks to the heavens to explore medieval understandings of how astral and planetary positions affected human life. Paying particular attention to the popularity—at least in courtly circles—of astrolabes and miscellanies devoted to astrology and time measurement, Adler and Strohm demonstrate a widespread belief that the order of the cosmos both reflected and influenced earthly experience. Of course, Chaucer’s Treatise on the Astrolabe illustrates this fascination; the chapter also considers the prevalence of [End Page 97] the zodiac and other astrological referents in a range of medieval texts to chart the widespread belief that every human life was to some degree regulated by cosmic forces.

The next two chapters take a closer look at some well-known medieval texts (as well as a few lesser-known works) to examine how theories of time shape both fictional and non-fictional narrative structures. ‘Lives in Time,’ Chapter Four, revisits the real-life testimonies of Julian of Norwich, Margery Kempe, and Thomas Usk, paying attention to their expressed concerns with how well they have ‘managed’ the time each has been given to serve God (Julian and Margery) or the king (Usk); this much-debated question of the ‘duration’ of service as a factor in achieving sanctity is raised in the difficult parable of the workers in the vineyard (Matthew 20:1–16). Chapter Five, ‘Timescapes: Narrative Shapes in Time,’ explores how episodes in Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde and Malory’s Morte Darthur exploit the ‘supple time-sense’ (p. 121) of medieval temporality. Strohm and Adler are both Chaucerians and one of the delights of the volume is to re-visit several of Chaucer’s works with their guidance.

Chapter Six, ‘Allegories of Time,’ reminds readers that allegorical representations of time-related concepts abound in the medieval imagination: the virtue Temperance, for instance, often depicted with a clock to abet moderation; Fortune with her wheel of inescapable change; dancing Death, that grim figure betokening the end for every life. ‘Ages of Humankind,’ Chapter Seven...

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来源期刊
Arthuriana
Arthuriana Multiple-
CiteScore
0.30
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期刊介绍: Arthuriana publishes peer-reviewed, on-line analytical and bibliographical surveys of various Arthurian subjects. You can access these e-resources through this site. The review and evaluation processes for e-articles is identical to that for the print journal . Once accepted for publication, our surveys are supported and maintained by Professor Alan Lupack at the University of Rochester through the Camelot Project.
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