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Music in the Writings and Imagination of Silesian Humanists explores the sound-world of early modern Silesia via the writings of humanists active there in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries who both observed musical culture and actively participated in it: a poet, a publisher, a pedagogue, a physician, a historian, and a regionalist. Such an approach makes it possible to reconstruct their perceptions and understandings of music—a constitutive element of this community. As these authors concentrated more on the representation of music than the art itself, the book reflects the collective memory of the republic of scholars: their individual and common imaginarium.
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Tomasz Jeż is an associate professor at the University of Warsaw. His books and articles examine the heuristic and spiritual contexts of early modern Europe’s musical culture. Professor Jeż is the editor-in-chief of the Fontes Musicae in Poloniae series, which publishes critical editions of early music (www.fontesmusicae.pl).
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 1 Prologue
 2 Laurentius Corvinus
 3 Andreas Winkler
 4 Petrus Vincentius
 5 Lorenz Scholz
 6 Nicolaus Pol
 7 Nicolaus Henel
 8 Epilogue
Bibliography
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