Introduction: the Jew, the cathedral and the city; Part I. Imagining Jews and Judaism in Life and Art: 1. The Jew in a Christian world: denunciation and restraint in the age of cathedrals; 2. Ecclesia and Synagoga: the life of a motif; Part II. Art and Life on the Ecclesiastical Stage - Three Case Studies: Introduction to Part II: nature, antiquity and sculpture in the early thirteenth century; 3. Reims: 'our Jews' and the royal sphere; 4. Bamberg: the empire, the Jews and earthly order; 5. Strasbourg: clerics, burghers and Jews in the medieval city; Epilogue: the afterlife of an image.
This book examines the Synagoga-Ecclesia motif in the thirteenth century and argues that the figures conveyed a political message of Christian ascendancy and Jewish submission.
Nina Rowe is an Assistant Professor of Art History at Fordham University. The recipient of numerous fellowships and grants, she co-authored (with Sandra Hindman, Michael Camille and Rowan Watson) Manuscript Illumination in the Modern Age: Recovery and Reconstruction and co-edited (with David Areford) Excavating the Medieval Image: Manuscripts, Artists, Audiences - Essays in Honor of Sandra Hindman. She has published articles in the journals Gesta and Studies in Iconography, as well as in various edited volumes.
'Rowe's approach to her work is impressively versatile, drawing
historical, textual, and material evidence into synthesis with
formal and stylistic observations to walk the line attentively
between the worm's-eye and the bird's-eye view of her subject. The
breadth and soundness of the resulting book will interest a wide
range of scholars in fields from art history and Jewish studies to
theology, anthropology and beyond. The Jew, the Cathedral and the
Medieval City … represents a masterful scholarly accomplishment and
a signal contribution to medieval studies.' The Medieval Review
'Rowe's study represents a valuable contribution to the corpus of
scholarship on Jewish-Christian interaction, medieval urban history
and Gothic art. Scholars and students alike will want to
familiarize themselves with Rowe's arguments and imitate her
interpretative methodologies.' German History
'The Jew, the Cathedral and the Medieval City is an excellent
example of a study on the border between history and art history. …
Rowe's work … sheds new light on the Synagoga-Ecclesia theme
through a probing study of the political and ecclesiastical milieux
that generated the monumental ensembles at three important
cathedrals: Reims, Bamberg and Strasbourg.' Bulletin monumental
'Rowe's book is one of very few studies of German Gothic sculpture
in English; that alone makes it a significant contribution. … What
makes Rowe's study novel is her integration of the images into the
social and political circumstances of their production and
consumption, above all, those that involved the resident clergy's
interactions with and attitudes toward Jews. The Art Bulletin
'Nina Rowe has succeeded in providing scholars with a provocative
foray into the difficult problem of the relationship of artistic
evidence to the lived realities of social and political life. Often
she is forced to speculate, but she is always forthright about the
limitations of her evidence. Not everyone will agree with all her
conclusions, but no one working in the general area of her concerns
can afford to ignore them. Speculum
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