Best place tobuy Valium on line you can find
Best place toget CBD gummies online you can find
Best place tobuy Tramadols online you can find

Virtual Event “Dissimilar Similitudes: Devotional Objects in Late Medieval Europe,” Oct. 27

Two eminent scholars with a shared interest in women’s history and the history of materiality, Caroline Bynum and Brooke Holmes, will be discussing holy objects on Tuesday, October 27 at 6 p.m. for a virtual audience. This event is presented by Labyrinth Books of Princeton in partnership with the Institute for Advanced Study and the Princeton University Humanities Council.

Between the 12th and the 16th centuries, European Christians used in worship a plethora of objects, not only prayer books, statues, and paintings but also pieces of natural materials considered to carry holiness, dolls representing Jesus and Mary, and even bits of consecrated bread and wine thought to be miraculously preserved flesh and blood. Theologians and ordinary worshippers alike explained, utilized, justified, and warned against some of these objects, which could carry with them both anti-Semitic charges and the glorious prospect of heaven. Their proliferation and the reaction against them form a crucial background to the European-wide movements we know today as “reformations” (both Protestant and Catholic).

Bynum considers some examples of such holy things, among them beds for the baby Jesus, the headdresses of medieval nuns, and the footprints of Christ carried home from the Holy Land by pilgrims in patterns cut to their shape and their measurement in lengths of string. She demonstrates that the objects themselves communicate a paradox of dissimilar similitude – that is, that in their very details they both image the glory of heaven and make clear that heaven is beyond any representation in earthly things.

Bynum’s work has been instrumental in introducing the concept of gender into the study of medieval Christianity. Her early, path-breaking books are Holy Feast and Holy Fast and The Resurrection of the Body in Western Christendom. Her most recent book is Christian Materiality. She is professor emerita in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study.

Holmes is professor of classics at Princeton University. She is the author of The Symptom and the Subject: The Emergence of the Physical Body in Ancient Greece and Gender: Antiquity and Its Legacy.

To register, click here: https://www.crowdcast.io/e/caroline-walker-bynum/register

Bitpro Nexus Bitpro Nexus