ARTH 401(F) The Word-Made-Flesh (Same as Religion 222)
Why did the physical presentation of Scripture change so radically during the
course of the first millennium? What motivated the transformation of the earliest
type of biblical books-comprising words inscribed in ink on fragile papyrus
leaves or parchment rolls-into splendid codices written in gold on stained
vellum, adorned with elaborated initials and charts, expanded with prologues
and poetry, and embellished with icons inside and on magnificent treasure
bindings? Examining such issues as the origin of the codex as the characteristic
form of the Christian book, the effect of eighth/ninth-century image debates on
the concept of the ornamented manuscripts, and the function(s) of the Bible in
church and court, The Word-Made-Flesh will explore the ways in which books
containing sacred scripture were figured as actual embodiments of God. Students will visit the exhibition Bible and Book at the Freer Gallery in
Washington, which the Croghan Visiting Professor Herbert Kessler helped to
organize, and they will prepare research papers based on the precious objects
displayed there or available for study elsewhere.
Format: seminar.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 15 (expected: 12). Preference given to art
majors.
Satisfies the seminar requirement in art history.
Hour: KESSLER