ARTH 105
Picturing God in the Middle Ages: An Introduction
Last Offered Fall 2008
Division I Writing Skills
This course is not offered in the current catalog

Class Details

How did Christians come to depict God? How did they visualize the deity described in the Bible as well as such theological subtleties as the Incarnation and the Trinity? And what purposes did pictures of God serve, both in public and private life? Paying particular attention to the function of works of art, this freshman seminar will examine the evolution of medieval Christian images of God, in both the Eastern and Western halves of Europe, and the problems these images often generated. Among other specific topics, the course will investigate: the impact of the Roman cult of the emperor and of images of the dead on the earliest portraits of Christ; theological debates about the nature of spiritual versus physical vision and their influence on the making and viewing of images; the relationship of sacred images to relics, the Eucharist, and other aspects of Christian ritual; and the pictorial exploration of both the torture and sexuality of Christ.
The Class: Format: seminar
Limit: 10
Grading: yes pass/fail option, yes fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation: evaluation will be based on several short writing assignments, oral presentations, a research paper, and class participation
Prerequisites: none, but enrollment is limited to first-year students
Unit Notes: does NOT satisfy the seminar requirement for the major
Distributions: Division I Writing Skills
Attributes: ARTH pre-1400 Courses
ARTH pre-1800 Courses
CRAAS Critical Reasoning + Analytical Skills

Class Grid

Updated 6:07 am

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