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Dorit Tanay [3]Dorit Esther Tanay [2]
  1.  4
    Music in the Age of Ockham: The Interrelations Between Music, Mathematics, and Philosophy in the 14th Century.Dorit Esther Tanay - 1989 - Umi.
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  2.  38
    "Nos faysoms contre Nature...": Fourteenth-Century Sophismata and the Musical Avant Garde.Dorit Esther Tanay - 1998 - Journal of the History of Ideas 59 (1):29.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Nos faysoms contre Nature...”: Fourteenth-Century Sophismata and the Musical Avant GardeDorit TanayThe secular musical repertory of the late fourteenth century has been described in terms of unparalleled rhythmic intricacies, reflecting a conscious tendency to exhaust the scope of free play within the parameter of time in music. 1 Historians of music see in such musical complexity a case of a musical system in disarray, to be explained by patterns (...)
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  3.  10
    Noting Music, Marking Culture: The Intellectual Context of Rhythmic Notation, 1240-1400.Dorit Tanay - 1999 - American Institute of Musicology Hanssler Verlag.
  4.  22
    The Birth of Opera and the New Science.Dorit Tanay - 2006 - The European Legacy 11 (7):753-764.
    Since its birth in 1600 opera has been interpreted as an attempt to revive Greek tragedies in its marvelous music. Its provocative presentation of action and narration entirely in music has been seen as a manifestation of the enchanted universe of sixteenth-century hermeticism. Viewed as a final homage to the magical incantations of the premodern era, late Renaissance operas have been interpreted as the culmination rather than the dissolution of Renaissance culture. This paper proposes that the relationship between the natural (...)
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    The Image of Music and the Bodies of Knowledge in the Late Middle Ages: Rhythmic Procedures as Cultural Representations.Dorit Tanay - 1996 - Science in Context 9 (2):121-136.
    The ArgumentThe paper argues that the distinction between modernism and postmodernism can be applied metaphorically to clarify the changing image of music during the late Middle Ages. The paper discusses the scientific and rational strategies that thirteenth century musical theorists applied to revise earlier musical conceptualization. It highlights the thirteenth-century innovative affiliation of music with Aristotelian physics and argues that in a very subtle and seemingly contradictory way music theorists expressed the nascent awareness, if not tacit acknowledgment, of the mundane (...)
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