Ranulph Higden, Ars Componendi Sermones (Dallas Medieval Texts and Translations) - Bryan Wilson - Books - Peeters - 9789042912427 - April 10, 2003
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Ranulph Higden, Ars Componendi Sermones (Dallas Medieval Texts and Translations)


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Ranulph Higden, monk of St. Werburgh's Abbey and well-known author of the Polychronicon and other treatises, penned a concise and user-friendly Art of Preaching about 1346. His Ars componendi sermones follows a schematic common to many members of this genre and includes attributes desirable or necessary in the preacher, methods for piquing an audience's interest, the process of effective repetition, and suggestions for creating rhythmic patterns in prose. Its major focus, however, is the clear and comprehensive discussion of each thematic sermon part: the theme or scriptural text, its development in protheme and introduction, its division, subdivision, and embellishment. affinities to contemporary rhetorical texts, especially the artes poeticae and dictaminis, and displays an analogous relationship with Ciceronian dispositio as developed in the De Inventione and Rhetorica ad Herennium. A few of the many items of interest scattered throughout the text are Ranulph insistence that preaching be separate from university exercises and his comments about various subjects like direct entry into heaven post mortem, the scope of medieval optics, what and who compose the church, and the quadruple levels of scriptural exegesis

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released April 10, 2003
ISBN13 9789042912427
Publishers Peeters
Pages 73
Dimensions 165 × 8 × 235 mm   ·   254 g
Language English  

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