Ann Buckley

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Ann Buckley
Información personal
Nacimiento Siglo XX Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Nacionalidad Irlandesa
Educación
Educada en
Información profesional
Ocupación Autora, musicóloga e historiadora Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata
Área Musicología Ver y modificar los datos en Wikidata

Ann Buckley es una musicóloga irlandesa.[1]

Buckley obtuvo sus B.Mus., y M.A. por la Universidad Nacional de Irlanda, defendió y fue galardonanda con el doctorado por la Universidad de Ámsterdam y otro Ph.D. por la Universidad de Cambridge. Realiza actividades académicas y científicas como investigadora asociada en el Centro de Estudios Medievales y Renacimiento, Trinity College, Dublin.[2]

Obra[editar]

Algunas publicaciones[editar]

  • The Tiompan: A Study of the Evidence in Literary and Iconographic Sources. Publicó NUI, Department of Music, UCC. 56 p. 1972
  • What was the Tiompán? A problem in ethnohistorical organology. Evidence in Irish literature, p. 53-88, Jahrbuch fur Musikalische Volks - un Volkerkunde, ix, 1978.
  • Timpán/Tiompán, in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Londres, 1980
  • A note on the history and archaeology of Jew's harps in Ireland, p. 29–35, North Munster Antiquarian Journal, xxv, 1983.
  • Jew's harps in Irish Archaeology, en Second Conference of the ICTM Study Group on Music Archaeology, p. 49–71, ed. Cajsa S. Lund, Estocolmo, 1986.
  • Timpán/Tiompán, in The New Grove Dictionary of Musical Instruments, Londres, 1986.
  • A ceramic signal horn from medieval Dublin, p. 9–10, in Archaeologia Musicalis i, 1987
  • A Viking vow from 11th century Dublin, p. 10–11, in Archaeologia Musicalis, i, 1987
  • Musical instruments from Medieval Dublin: A Preliminary Survey, p. 145–162, in the Archaeology of Early Music Cultures:Proceedings of the Third International Conference of the Study Group on Music Archaeology, Bonn, 1988
  • Musical instruments in Ireland 9th 14th centuries: A review of the organological evidence, p. 13–57, Irish Musical Studies i, Blackrock, County Dublin, 1990.
  • Sound Tools from the Waterford Excavations; typescript, 1991
  • Music-related imagery on early Christian insular sculpture:identification, context, function, p. 135–199, Imago Musicae/ International Yearbook of Musical Iconography, viii, 1991.
  • Harps and Lyres on early medieval monuments in Britain and Ireland, p. 8–9, 15-21, Harp vii (3/1992)
  • An archaeological survey of musical instruments from medieval Ireland, p. 65–72, Festschrift Tadeusz Malinowski, Supsk-Poza, 1993.
  • "A lesson for the people": Reflections on image and habitus in medieval insular iconographny, p. 3-9, RIdIM/RCMI Newsletter XX/1 (primavera 1995)
  • "And his voice swelled like a terrible thunderstorm ...": Music as symbolic sound in Irish society, p. 11–74, Irish Musical Studies, iii, 1995.
  • Music and Manners:Readings of medieval Irish Literature, pp. 33–49, Bullán: An Irish Studies Journal, III/1 (primavera 1997)
  • Representations of musicians in John Derricke's 'The image of Irelande' (1581), p. 77–91, Music, Words, and Images: Essays in Honour of Koraljka Kos, editó Vjera Katalinić y Zdravko Blažeković, Zagreb: Croatian Musicological Society, 1999.
  • Music and musicians in medieval Irish society, p. 165–190, Early Music xxviii (2) mayo de 2000.
  • Celtic Chant, p. 341–349, The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Londres, 2000.
  • Representations of musicians in medieval Christian iconography of Ireland and Scotland as local cultural expression, p. 217–231, Art and Music in the Early Medieval Period: Essays in honor of Franca Triachieri Camiz (editó Katherine A. McIver), Aldershot, 2003.
  • Music in Prehistoric and Medieval Ireland, p. 744–813, in A New History of Ireland I, Oxford, 2005.

En progreso[editar]

  • 2016. Ann Buckley (ed.) Letetur Hibernia! Music, Liturgy and the veneration of Irish Saints in Medieval Europe, Turnout (en preparación).

Referencias[editar]

  1. «Ann Buckley Visiting Research Fellow, Cntr for Medieval & Renaissance Studies» (en inglés). Trinity College Dublin. 26 de enero de 2016. Consultado el 2 de septiembre de 2016. 
  2. «Dr Ann Buckley». Trinity Medieval History Research Centre. 2 de febrero de 2016. Consultado el 2 de septiembre de 2016. 

Enlaces externos[editar]