A book for those who already love hymns in the English language ... Watson's anthology is a fascinating read as well as a book to dip into when you get home from church and want to know more about the hymn you have just sung ... an informative work.

Church Times

Professor Watson's comments are expert without being flawless: his assessments charitable without claiming to be final ... his book sets down a marker for our generation. It is both a joy to read through and a vital work of reference. No serious student of hymns can now do without it, the nearest volume yet to that much-desired dream The Oxford Book of Hymns.

New Directions

More than a reference book. The editor is an enthusiast.

Bulletin of The Hymn Society of Great Britain & Ireland

Se alle

It is a joy to handle ... He [Watson] is an expert guide on skilfully-inserted pauses, wisely-timed repetitions, or precisely-chosen adjectives; such easily-overlooked details may distinguish a good hymn from an average one, or great hymns from good ones ... This author does not mock what he clearly considers inferior but unexcludable. He is kind to Fanny Crosby in the west and Greenland's mountains up north.

News of Hymnody

It is a book to have at hand, to dip into and keep using. Many sermons and addresses will benefit from its inspiration and learning.

Methodist Recorder

Not only has Prof Richard Watson, who edited this anthology, the experience of working with hymnody over many years and the research to bring together material from many disciplines, he also has the felicity of written style which makes the book a joy to read. His ability to express in a few well-chosen words carefully made judgments is linked to a refreshing clarity of expression, so that the reader is encouraged to read on, knowing that the experience will be both profitable and pleasurable.

Methodist Recorder

Invaluable anthology ... There is much to enjoy here ... [Watson] guides the reader through each hymn, paying attention to form.

Glyn Paflin, Times Literary Supplement

It is a work of distinction, written with eloquence and grace. Watson writes as an enthusiast ... What Watson demonstrates is that competent hymns usually have a distinctive shape and idea, and that their writers have, if not a theology then at least an emphasis and style of their own.

London Review of Books

An Annotated Anthology of Hymns is a selection of 250 of the best-known hymns in the English language, including texts translated from Greek, Latin, German, and other languages. The selection includes hymns from the earliest years of the Christian church to the present day. This is not a book for worship: the hymns are printed in a chronological sequence and not by Christian season or subject, as they would be in a church hymn book. It is an anthology for those who would like to understand more about hymns: each one is given a commentary which sets it in context, identifies significant sources, and provides explanatory and critical material. An introductory essay discusses the hymn as a historical and literary form, and the way in which it appeals to so many people. This is a book which shows how, in the words of the foreword by Timothy Dudley-Smith, 'hymns lift the heart'. It will be treasured by those who already know something about hymns and it will delight all those who enjoy hymns and would like to know more about them.
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This is a selection of 250 of the best-known hymns in the English language, including texts translated from Greek, Latin, German, and other languages, and spanning the two millennia of the Christian church. Ordered alphabetically, each is put in context with exaplanatory material.
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`Excellent ... informative and highly enjoyable ... well indexed.' Epworth Review `Review from other book by this author A book which gives so much enlightenment and pleasure ... It more than fulfils its author's aim of rescuing hymns from their second-rate image in the eyes of the literary establishment, and demonstrates their subtlety and imaginative power.' Church Times `The problem with attempting to discuss a book as rich as Professor Watson's is that it is the illustrations which bring it to life, but space prevents lavish quotation. Two features distinguish this illuminating study: the analysis of the language and the exposition of the structure of the hymns ... superb book.' The Expository Times, Volume 109, November 1997 `Watson fills a gap left by popular books on the subject. For readers less interested in the scholarly analysis of the poetics of hymns, Watson's provides tantalizing personal glimpses of the poets themselves and the conditions behind their works. Despite its cost, no one undertaking a serious study of English hymnody can afford to neglect this volume whether approaching this subject from a musical. literary, liturgical, or histroical perspective.' Timothy J. Ralston, Bibliotheca Sacra Vol.157 No.625 `It is a work of distinction, written with eloquence and grace. Watson writes as an enthusiast ... What Watson demonstrates is that competent hymns usually have a distinctive shape and idea, and that their writers have, if not a theology then at least an emphasis and style of their own.' London Review of Books `The publication of this scholarly, thought-provoking and enormously enjoyable book is a major event for hymnologists. In scale and scope it is comparable only with Louis F. Benson's The English Hymn ... The new book certainly deserves to achieve the classic status of Benson's earlier work. Those of our members who enjoy deepening their understanding of and response to individual well-loved texts will find some real treasures here. He gives much closer and more detailed readings than do many deservedly popular writers ... but his critical analyses are always imaginative as well as academic, in the best and oldest sense of that word ... His book is a 'must' for the library of any university or college which teaches either hymnology or English literature to degree level. It should also give great pleasure and enlightenment to the serious general reader.' Elizabeth Cosnett, The Hymn Society, 15/5 January 1998 `Watson's ability to apply lit-crit techniques to texts that we usually undervalue makes this an illuminating book ... the uninitiated reader does not need to learn a new vocabulary ... such intelligent enthusiasm for a topic that has been hitherto so taken for granted can only stimulate the reader and, we hope, lead to a new respect (and revival?) for the under-valued hymn.' Early Music Review - 37 - February 1998 `Magnificent book.' Theology `First-class, penetrating and enlightening book...In the immense detail, Watson is totally sure-footed, but his greatest skill is in the analysis of the firm of hymns.' Epworth Review `J.R.Watson, who reports towards the end of this meticulous and monumental book that there were some 40,000 hymns in existence in English by the end of the nineteenth century ... deserves our gratitude for having read a good many of them in preparing it ... Scattered throughout The English Hymn there are valuable and memorable passages, the fruits of Watson's long attention to his subject and of his intricate familiarity with it.' Times Literary Supplement `rich, full, and ambitious book.' Isabel Rivers, The Review of English Studies `Sensitively and thoughtfully he discusses the role of sound and image within the formal limits dictated by the genre and the use of language to stimulate perception and to relate and create experience. ... literary analysis is consistently subtle, delicate and persuasive ... he writes always from a deep love of the form and as one who would resist the wholesale abandonment of pre-twentieth century hymns which he has witnessed in recent decades.' Jeffrey Richards, Modern Believing `this is a very fine study which anyone interested in English culture and literature will read with pleasure and instruction. It moves with insight and commanding ease through the detailed history of the art, content and function of the hymn from the metrical psalms of the Reformation to the popular revival of recent decades ... Oxford University Press have produced a truly handsome volume' Vincent Newey, The Byron Journal `Dr Johnson famously held that religious poetry receives 'no grace from novelty of sentiment, and very little from novelty of expression'. It is this neglect, and this dismissiveness, that J.R.Watson's book addresses. It magnificently supplies the deficiency and silences the disparagement. With exemplary attentiveness to textual detail, it demonstrates how misguided the Johnsonian line is ... magisterial book.' N.H.Keeble, University of Stirling, MLR, vol 94.3, 1999 `A paperback edition of J Richard Watson's 'The English Hymn' has been published by Oxford University Press ... It should make this splendid book available to a wider range of readers.' The Expository Times, January 2000
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Prints 250 hymns Includes accurate and informative explanatory notes on the words and music of each hymn to aid appreciation and understanding Accessible to non-specialists, yet also a useful source-book for scholars Includes much-loved hymns and takes them seriously The hymns are printed historically, not alphabetically, and are not split up according to subject as they would be in a book for worship Includes a foreword by Timothy Dudley-Smith, one of today's greatest hymn-writers
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J.R. Watson is Emeritus Professor of English and Emeritus Public Orator of the University of Durham. Twenty years ago he chose for the subject of his Inaugural Lecture, 'The Victorian Hymn'. He was serving at the time on the committee of the Methodist (and Ecumenical) Hymns and Psalms (1983), and later edited, with Kenneth Trickett, the Companion to Hymns and Psalms (1988). He was a member of the Archbishops' Commission on Church music, and more recently of the editorial committee responsible for the latest revision of Hymns Ancient and Modern, Common Praise (2000). His critical and historical study, The English Hymn, was published by Oxford University Press in 1997 (paperback 1999).
Les mer
Prints 250 hymns Includes accurate and informative explanatory notes on the words and music of each hymn to aid appreciation and understanding Accessible to non-specialists, yet also a useful source-book for scholars Includes much-loved hymns and takes them seriously The hymns are printed historically, not alphabetically, and are not split up according to subject as they would be in a book for worship Includes a foreword by Timothy Dudley-Smith, one of today's greatest hymn-writers
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198269731
Publisert
2002
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
807 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
470

Redaktør

Biographical note

J.R. Watson is Emeritus Professor of English and Emeritus Public Orator of the University of Durham. Twenty years ago he chose for the subject of his Inaugural Lecture, 'The Victorian Hymn'. He was serving at the time on the committee of the Methodist (and Ecumenical) Hymns and Psalms (1983), and later edited, with Kenneth Trickett, the Companion to Hymns and Psalms (1988). He was a member of the Archbishops' Commission on Church music, and more recently of the editorial committee responsible for the latest revision of Hymns Ancient and Modern, Common Praise (2000). His critical and historical study, The English Hymn, was published by Oxford University Press in 1997 (paperback 1999).