Mystical Love in the German Baroque: Theology, Poetry, Music
Mystical
Love in the German Baroque: Theology, Poetry, Music identifies the
cultural and devotional conventions underlying expressions of mystical
love in poetry and music of the German baroque. It sheds new light on
the seemingly erotic overtones in settings of the Song of Songs and
dialogues between Christ and the faithful soul in late 17th- and early
18th-century cantatas by Heinrich SchYtz, Dieterich Buxtehude, and
Johann Sebastian Bach. While these compositions have been interpreted
solely as a secularizing tendency within devotional music of the baroque
period, Isabella van Elferen demonstrates that they need to be viewed
instead as intensifications of the sacred. Based on a wide selection of
previously unedited or translated 17th- and 18th-century sources, van
Elferen describes the history and development of baroque poetic and
musical love discourses, from SchYtz's early works through Buxtehude's
cantatas and Bach's cantatas and Passions. This long and multilayered
discursive history of these compositions considers the love poetry of
Petrarch, European reception of petrarchan imagery and traditions, its
effect on the madrigal in Germany, and the role of Catholic medieval
mystics in baroque Lutheranism. Van Elferen shows that Bach's
compositional technique, based on the emotional characteristics of text
and music rather than on the depiction of single words, allows the
musical expression of mystical love to correspond closely to
contemporary literary and theological conceptions of this affect.
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