The 12th-century manuscript of Gregory the Great's Moralia in Job contains images of seemingly gratuitous violence and daily life. This book argues that beyond the face value of these illuminations lies an undercurrent of thematic consistency. Like obscure events from Scripture, the author maintains, the iamges may lead to another level of meaning yet to be discovered. Rudolph focuses on the ways spirituality and politics operate in the artistic process that produced this particular manuscript. By exploring these interactions, we can understand how the form of spirituality embodied in this manuscript legitimzed a very intimate attitude on the part of the artist toward the subject. The images are in fact, he argues, the product of Gregory's demand that one become what one reads: some reflect the ideal monk crafting a holy place out of the wilderness, others the Cistercian notion of spiritual advancement as a violent struggle.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Princeton University Press
ISBN-13
9780691026732
eBay Product ID (ePID)
106769404
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Book Title
Violence and Daily Life: Reading, Art, and Polemics in the Citeaux Moralia in Job