The Maze and the Warrior

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-05-01
Publisher(s): Harvard Univ Pr
List Price: $35.70

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Summary

A tourist visiting the famous cathedral at Chartres might be surprised to discover an enormous labyrinth embedded in the thirteenth-century floor. Why is it there? In this fascinating book Craig Wright explores the complex symbolism of the labyrinth in architecture, religious thought, music, and dance from the Middle Ages to the present. The mazes incorporated into church floors and illustrating religious books were symbolic of an epic journey through this sinful world to salvation. A savior figure typically led the way along this harrowing spiritual path. Wright looks at other meanings of the maze as well, from religious dancing on church labyrinths to pagan maze rituals outside the church. He demonstrates that the theme inherent in spiritual mazes is also present in medieval song, in the Armed Man Masses of the Renaissance, and in compositions of the Enlightenment, including the works of J. S. Bach. But the thread that binds the maze to the church, to music, and to dance also ties it to the therapeutic labyrinth that proliferates today. For as this richly interdisciplinary history reveals, the maze of the "new age" spiritualists also traces its lineage to the ancient myth of Theseus and the Minotaur. While the hero of the maze may change from one culture to the next, the symbol endures.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments IX
Prologue: Maze Mania 1(6)
1. The Ancient and Early Christian Maze 7(22)
2. The Maze as Symbol in the Church 29(44)
3. The Theology of the Maze 73(28)
4. The Warrior, the Lamb, and Astrology 101(28)
5. The Dance of the Maze 129(30)
6. Symbolizing the Christian Warrior 159(16)
7. Sounds and Symbols of an Armed Man 175(32)
8. The Maze of Pilgrimage and Pleasure 207(26)
9. Musical Mazes from Moses to Mozart 233(38)
Epilogue: The Maze Reborn in an Ecumenical Age 271(6)
Appendix A. Musical Examples 277(5)
Appendix B. Tables 282(7)
Abbreviations 289(2)
Works Cited 291(12)
Notes 303(39)
Illustration Credits 342(3)
Index 345

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