medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
Kevin Teo wrote:
>
> I am not sure if I got the title of the journal correct. The Catholic
> Historical Review was what came to mind, being run by Catholic
> University of America Press. (I will double check again about the
> journal or review journal, and see again if it is the one.)
Patrick Hayes wrote:
>
> Two of the better journals in liturgical studies (not strictly
> dedicated to medieval liturgy, but providing a fair amount of
> material in each issue) would be Worship (published out of
> Collegeville, Minnesota) and Ecclesia Orans (published in Rome by the
> Pontifical Liturgical Institute). Frequently the American
> Benedictine Review or Cistercian Studies provides readers with
> articles on medieval liturgy.
John Dillon wrote:
>
> _Archiv für Liturgiewissenschaft_ publishes extensively in medieval
> liturgy.
Revd Gordon Plumb wrote:
>
> You might also try Ephemerides Liturgicae
cecilia gaposchkin wrote:
>
> Depending upon the accessiblity of the article, I would have thought:
>
> Early Music History
>
> Plainsong and Medieval Music
>
> "Music" and "liturgy" are technically two different fields, but
> depending on what the research is it may be appropriately music.
Ryan, Thomas F. wrote:
>
> I have numerous hardcopy issues of Speculum and the Journal of the
> American Academy of Religion that I'd like to give away. Any
> suggestions?
Many thanks for all these suggestions - what is really striking is that
there is such a wide range, and no two people suggesting the same title!
Cecilia Gaposchkin's suggestions are intriguing, reminding us that much of
the running in recent years with regard to the historical study of liturgy
has come from musicologists. I suppose this all means that such studies are
published in a wide variety of journals, with the authors thinking of
themselves as theologians (liturgists rather than liturgiologists) if they
are in Theology departments, or musicologists if they are in Music
departments. Ecclesiastical historians probably regard themselves as
primarily historians, and would choose where to publish accordingly.
"Archiv für Liturgiewissenschaft" would seem to be the nearest to a "core"
journal for historical liturgiology - but it publishes largely in the German
language.
John Briggs
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