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Home > Catalogue > Reading in Medieval St. Gall
Reading in Medieval St. Gall

Details

  • Page extent: 380 pages
  • Size: 244 x 170 mm
  • Weight: 0.61 kg
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Paperback

 (ISBN-13: 9781107405295)

Manufactured on demand: supplied direct from the printer

US $40.00
Singapore price US $42.80 (inclusive of GST)

This book was first published in 2006. Learning to read in medieval Germany meant learning to read and understand Latin as well as the pupils' own language. The teaching methods used in the medieval Abbey of St Gall survive in the translations and commentaries of the monk, scholar and teacher Notker Labeo (c.950–1022). Notker's pedagogic method, although deeply rooted in classical and monastic traditions, demonstrates revolutionary innovations that include providing translations in the pupils' native German, supplying structural commentary in the form of simplified word order and punctuation, and furnishing special markers that helped readers to perform texts out loud. Anna Grotans examines this unique interplay between orality and literacy in Latin and Old High German, and illustrates her study with many examples from Notker's manuscripts. This study has much to contribute to our knowledge of medieval reading, and of the relationship between Latin and the vernacular in a variety of formal and informal contexts.

• Makes available to English-speaking scholars the teaching methods practised in medieval Germany • Demonstrates how pupils were taught to read German and Latin in the tenth century • Discusses in detail the intersection between Latin and vernacular in medieval education practice

Contents

Introduction; 1. Medieval reading; 2. Education at St Gall; 3. Language use and choice; 4. The St Gall Tractate; 5. Discretion in the classroom; 6. Accentus; 7. Spelling for reading; Bibliographies.

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