The Virgin in Song: Mary and the Poetry of Romanos the Melodist

The Virgin in Song: Mary and the Poetry of Romanos the Melodist

by Thomas Arentzen
The Virgin in Song: Mary and the Poetry of Romanos the Melodist

The Virgin in Song: Mary and the Poetry of Romanos the Melodist

by Thomas Arentzen

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Overview

According to legend, the Virgin appeared one Christmas Eve to an artless young man standing in one of Constantinople's most famous Marian shrines. She offered him a scroll of papyrus with the injunction that he swallow it, and following the Virgin's command, he did so. Immediately his voice turned sweet and gentle as he spontaneously intoned his hymn "The Virgin today gives birth." So was born the career of Romanos the Melodist (ca. 485-560), one of the greatest liturgical poets of Byzantium, author of at least sixty long hymns, or kontakia, that were chanted during the night vigils preceding major feasts and festivals.

In The Virgin in Song, Thomas Arentzen explores the characterization of Mary in these kontakia and the ways in which the kontakia echoed the cult of the Virgin. He focuses on three key moments in her story as marked in the liturgical calendar: her encounter with Gabriel at the Annunciation, her child's birth at Christmas, and the death of her son on Good Friday. Consistently, Arentzen contends, Romanos counters expectations by shifting emphasis away from Christ himself to focus on Mary—as the subject of the erotic gaze, as a breastfeeding figure of abundance and fertility, and finally as an authoritatively vocal woman who conveys the secrets of her son and the joys of the resurrection.

Through his hymns, Romanos inspired an affective relationship between Mary and his audience, bringing the human and the holy into dialogue. By plumbing her emotional depths, the poet traces her process of understanding as she apprehends the mysteries that she embodies. By giving her a powerful voice, he grants subjectivity to a maiden who becomes a mediator. Romanos shaped a figure, Arentzen argues, who related intimately to her flock in a formative period of Christian orthodoxy.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812249071
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Publication date: 05/02/2017
Series: Divinations: Rereading Late Ancient Religion
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Thomas Arentzen teaches theology at the University of Oslo.

Table of Contents

A Note on Editions and Translations ix

List of Abbreviations xi

1 The Song and the City 1

2 On the Verge of Virginity 46

3 The Mother and Nurse of Our Life 87

4 A Voice of Rebirth 120

Conclusion. Virginity Recast 164

Appendix 1 On the Annunciation 175

Appendix 2 Catalogue of Hymns Referred to in the Study 189

Notes 191

Bibliography 227

Index 255

Acknowledgments 263

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