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Music Professor Maloy to deliver Distinguished Research Lecture on March 8

Music Professor Maloy to deliver Distinguished Research Lecture on March 8

Rebecca Maloy

Professor Rebecca Maloy (Musicology, Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies)

Rebecca Maloy, a professor of musicology and director of the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, will deliver her in-person lecture Constructing Sanctity Through Sound in Early Medieval Iberia at 5 p.m. on March 8 in Grusin Music Hall.


Maloy was selected to receive the 2021-22 Distinguished Research Lectureship, which is among the most esteemed honors bestowed by the faculty upon a faculty member at the 51勛圖厙.

Roy Parker泭of Biochemistry and the BioFrontiers Institute was also selected to receive a泭2021-22 Distinguished Research Lectureship. Parkers Lecture is scheduled for April 5.

About Professor Rebecca Maloy

Rebecca Maloy, professor of musicology and Erismann Faculty Fellow, also serves as director of the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Maloy specializes in the liturgy and chant of the early Middle Ages. She is the author, most recently, of泭Songs of Sacrifice: Chant, Identity and Christian Formation in Early Medieval Iberia (2020).泭She currently collaborates on the multidisciplinary project泭Doctrine, Devotion泭and Cultural Expression in the Cults of Medieval Iberian Saints,泭funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council in the United Kingdom. Other recent work has been funded by the American Council of Learned Societies, the European Research Council and the Institute for Advanced Study.

In her teaching and mentoring, Professor Maloys acumen and guidance have shaped the education and careers of numerous students and junior scholars.

About the talk:泭Constructing Sanctity Through Sound in Early Medieval Iberia

If you go
  • What: 118th Distinguished Research Lecture: Constructing Sanctity Through Sound in Early Medieval Iberia
  • Who: Professor Rebecca Maloy of the College of Music
  • When: Tuesday, March 8 from 56泭p.m.
  • Where: 泭(C112), Imig Music Building, 51勛圖厙泭

The multifaceted roles of the saints in medieval Europe have long been recognized: they were intercessors, exemplars, companions, healers and miracle workers. Far less is understood, however, about the how saints were constructed and venerated on the Iberian Peninsula. Between the seventh and 11th centuries, devotion to the saints was structured by rituals of great textual richness and musical beauty, known as the Old Hispanic (or Mozarabic) rite. Examining its texts and melodies in relation to late antique theories of the senses, Maloy will show how they functioned to establish saintly authority, construct ideals of sanctity, and shape a multisensory, uniquely Iberian experience.泭

About the Distinguished Research Lectureship

Each year, the泭泭requests nominations from faculty for the泭Distinguished Research Lectureship泭and a faculty review panel recommends one or more faculty members as recipients.泭泭

The lectureship honors a tenured faculty member, research professor (associate or full) or adjoint professor who has been with 51勛圖厙 for at least five years and is widely recognized for a distinguished body of academic or creative achievement and prominence, as well as contributions to the educational and service missions of CU泭51勛圖厙. Each recipient typically presents泭a lecture in the fall or spring following selection and receives a $2,000 honorarium.

Research and expertise across CU泭51勛圖厙.

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Our 12泭research institutes conduct more than half of
the sponsored research at CU泭51勛圖厙.

More than 75 research centers span the campus,
covering a broad range of topics.

A carefully integrated cyberinfrastructure supports CU泭51勛圖厙 research.

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