Juan del Encina’s Nativity Eclogues: A New English Translation

ROMARD ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 58 ◽  
pp. 39-72
Author(s):  
Alexandra Atiya

Juan del Encina has long been recognized as a crucial figure in Iberian drama, yet few of his works have been translated into English. Encina wrote plays, poetry, and music in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, and scholars have traditionally regarded Encina’s writing as a turning point in early Spanish drama, both because of the secular material included in his plays and because Encina supervised the publication of his own works. He is also credited with contributing to the professionalization of Spanish theater by depicting the court of his patrons, the Duke and Duchess of Alba, as a site of theatrical performance. Encina’s innovative dramas interweave courtly, religious, and pastoral drama with metafictional elements. Atiya presents translations of two plays included in Encina’s 1496 Cancionero, a printed compilation of poetic, dramatic, and musical works.

Africa ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Kresse

ABSTRACTThe pamphletKenya: Twendapi?(Kenya: Where are we heading?) is a text often referred to but rarely read or analysed. Abdilatif Abdalla wrote it as a twenty-two-year-old political activist of the KPU opposition as a critique of the dictatorial tendencies of Jomo Kenyatta and his KANU government in 1968, and consequently suffered three years of isolation in prison. Many (at least on the East African political and literary scene) know aboutKenya: Twendapi?but few seem to have read it – indeed, it seems almost unavailable to read. This contribution toAfrica's Local Intellectuals series provides a summary reconstruction of its main points and arguments, and a contextual discussion of the text. This is combined with the first published English translation (overseen by Abdalla himself) and a reprint of the original Swahili text, an important but almost inaccessible document. The article proceeds with a perspective first on the political context in Kenya at the time – an early turning point in postcolonial politics – and second on the work and life of its author, Abdilatif Abdalla who had been trained as a Swahili poet by elder family members who were poets. As most students of Swahili literature know, Abdalla's collection of poetrySauti ya Dhiki(1973) originated in the prison cell but they know little about the pamphletKenya: Twendapi?, nor the circumstances of its authorship. Part of my wider point for discussion is that Abdalla, as an engaged poet and political activist, can be usefully understood as a local intellectual who transcended the local from early on – topically and through global references and comparisons, but also through his experience in prison and exile. Concerns about Kenyan politics and Swahili literature have remained central to his life. This reflects Abdalla's continued and overarching connectedness to the Swahili-speaking region. Abdalla wrote in Swahili and was deeply familar with local Swahili genres and discursive conventions, language and verbal specifications (of critique, of emotions, of reflections) that use the whole range and depth of Kimvita, the Mombasan dialect of Kiswahili, as a reservoir of expression.


1995 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert K. Sarlós ◽  
Douglas McDermott

All artistic conventions of each theatrical era have two intertwining aspects: the aesthetic goals, and the technical crafts for achieving them. In some cases, a particular combination or development of skills results in a refinement of the art or the discovery of a newly desirable aesthetic; in others, the demand for new artistic effects leads to the invention of appropriate techniques. Thus, when painterly standards and drafting methods of central perspective spread rapidly over Northern Italy in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, illusionistic spectacle became an indispensable element of theatrical performance. It was eagerly supplied by architects in whom the printing of Vitruvius's De Architectura (1486) awakened both the responsibility for and the challenge embodied in designing theatrical scenery. Conversely, as Elizabethan playwrights conceived of plots dependent on avoidance of meetings between certain exiting and entering characters, second and third entrances were provided—either by cutting into the tiring house wall, or by hanging a curtain with several slits in front of it, to accommodate stage traffic.


2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 589-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alyxandra Vesey

RuPaul’s Drag Race (Logo TV, 2009–present) tethers drag culture to pop stardom by structuring challenges around host RuPaul’s recording career and eliminations around lip sync contests that promote guest judges’ music. By its fourth season, it began substantially rewarding contestants for using pop music to showcase their own branding and musical skills. By analyzing the program and its surrounding industry discourse, this article identifies a Season 4 infomercial challenge promoting RuPaul’s catalogue as a turning point in the program’s relationship to pop music due to its winner’s ascent as a recording artist. As a result, many white and light-skinned cast members were far better able to mount their own recording careers after appearing on the program than their counterparts of color. Thus, this article argues that Drag Race uses the recording industry as a site for contestants’ professionalization that reinforces pop music’s and reality programming’s entrenched neoliberalism and post-racial politics.


2003 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 1-56

The Lollard community of the Midlands city of Coventry, active between at least the 1480s and the early 1520s, is among the most well-documented of English heretical communities of the late Middle Ages. This is especially owing to the survival of the Lichfield Court Book, a detailed record of the examinations, depositions, abjurations, and sentences in a series of proceedings against the city's heretical community in 1511–1512. The present volume offers both the Latin original and an English translation of this fascinating document, together with all other known evidence for heretical activities in Coventry in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. These documents (including the Lichfield Court Book itself) derive mostly from the administrative records of the bishops of the diocese of Coventry and Lichfield, but we have also included accounts of heresy prosecutions from the Protestant martyrologist, John Foxe, and from Coventry's civic annals. The largest part of this material has hitherto been available only in manuscript and, in the case of the Lichfield Court Book, a manuscript difficult to read. Easy access to the original Latin texts, along with an English translation, will help bring these intriguing materials to a wider audience of scholars and students.


2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 381-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
ELIZABETH MORGAN

AbstractDuring the Civil War, countless musical works were written about the conflict and marketed to amateur musicians, especially women. Among them were pieces composed in response to recent conflicts, often published within days or weeks of the relevant event. Popular genres included keyboard battle pieces, which depicted some of the most pivotal battles of the war in musical rhetoric, bringing them alive in the minds and imaginations of drawing room performers and audiences.This essay is the first detailed study of American keyboard battle pieces from the Civil War. It investigates how they mirror many aspects of Civil War life, including the civilian demand for vivid war news, especially eyewitness accounts from the front, the advent of telegraphic reporting, and the fallibility of the media in reporting on the war. The pieces also reflect cultural trends of the mid-nineteenth century not related to war, particularly the popularity of theatrical melodrama on the stage and the prominence of virtuosity in piano repertoire. In investigating the performance of battle pieces as a site where women imagined and experienced the perils of war, this article contributes to scholarship that deepens our understanding of how women at home participated in mass culture.


Author(s):  
David Blake

Timbre, the distinctive quality of a particular sound, has become an increasingly critical analytical focus in recent music theory. Yet the sublinguistic nature of timbral cognition and the parameter’s inherent multidimensionality pose significant challenges to description and representation. This chapter examines four main approaches by which theorists have sought to understand timbre and employ it analytically: its ontology as a sonic object; its perception from cognitive, ecological, and social perspectives; its contribution as a salient parameter in musical works; and its spectrographic and discursive representation. Using examples including the Passacaglia from Caroline Shaw’s Partita for 8 Voices and the song “100,000 Fireflies” by the Magnetic Fields, the discussion suggests two precepts for timbral analysis: greater holistic and interdisciplinary attention to timbre’s dual nature as a sonic object and a site of identity politics, and an embrace of the contextual nature of timbral perception and description in proposing analytic schemata.


Author(s):  
Michele Girardi

Arrigo Boito sought to escape the limiting conventions of contemporary melodrama in order to revolutionize Italian opera. However, the most radical expression of that effort, his adaptation of Goethe’s Faust, Mefistofele (Mephistopheles), which premiered at La Scala in 1868, did not attain the desired result. In reworking the score, the composer took practical concerns into account, making the opera more pleasing to the mainstream audiences who demanded melodious vocal lines and a tighter dramatic pace. The revised version staged in Bologna in 1875 and the subsequent revivals marked an important turning point: what had been an avant-garde work now entered into the repertoire of all the major theaters. This chapter retraces Boito’s journey from the setback of the premiere to the success for which he strove so diligently, highlighting the creative process that forged a new relationship between poetry and music, which Giuseppe Verdi later exploited in his collaboration with the poet.


2013 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-295
Author(s):  
Franck Dalmas

Recent scholarship on Pierre Reverdy has neglected to study the relationship between Reverdy's poetry and music. The union of the two arts was questioned after André Breton's rejection of it. However, in a tribute to Reverdy back in 1962, composer Henry Barraud shared memories of his encounters with the poet and disclosed the talks they had had on his radio show about transposing poems into music. This article sets out to explore the fragile and little-known connection between Reverdy and music, as documented by his aesthetic debates with musicians such as in the radio broadcast and the unpublished correspondence with Barraud, and through the evidence of musical works inspired by his poems by artists of different generations. Notable associations between Reverdy's poetry and music are, among others, a piece of 1927 by André Jolivet, an early example of influence on Olivier Messiaen, the successive compositions of Betsy Jolas from 1949 through to 2009, and, finally, the 1989 centenary of the poet as celebrated by five pieces for solo guitar, each written by a different composer, and based upon the 1919 collection La Guitare endormie.


Author(s):  
O.L. Krivanek ◽  
J. TaftØ

It is well known that a standing electron wavefield can be set up in a crystal such that its intensity peaks at the atomic sites or between the sites or in the case of more complex crystal, at one or another type of a site. The effect is usually referred to as channelling but this term is not entirely appropriate; by analogy with the more established particle channelling, electrons would have to be described as channelling either through the channels or through the channel walls, depending on the diffraction conditions.


Author(s):  
Fred Eiserling ◽  
A. H. Doermann ◽  
Linde Boehner

The control of form or shape inheritance can be approached by studying the morphogenesis of bacterial viruses. Shape variants of bacteriophage T4 with altered protein shell (capsid) size and nucleic acid (DNA) content have been found by electron microscopy, and a mutant (E920g in gene 66) controlling head size has been described. This mutant produces short-headed particles which contain 2/3 the normal DNA content and which are non-viable when only one particle infects a cell (Fig. 1).We report here the isolation of a new mutant (191c) which also appears to be in gene 66 but at a site distinct from E920g. The most striking phenotype of the mutant is the production of about 10% of the phage yield as “giant” virus particles, from 3 to 8 times longer than normal phage (Fig. 2).


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