“Pleasure, Story, Word: Verse Bibles Before the English Reformation”

A Lecture by Professor Nicholas Watson, Harvard University

It is often claimed that medieval Christian Europe had no vernacular Bibles, which were a triumphant invention of sixteenth-century Protestantism, aided by the rise of print. One way this is wrong is in its narrow view of what counts as a Bible. Between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries in particular, European vernacular Bibles were as often as not in verse, presenting a view of the Scriptures not primarily as divine law but as a record of sacred history – of events and their layered meanings – offering readers and hearers not only the word of God but testimony to his actions as a creator, guide, and above all his incarnate presence. Heroic, performative, aesthetic – its rhythms staking a claim not only on the minds but on the bodily experience of its auditors – poetry was a fit medium for such testimony, elevating spoken Word over written Text.

Location: Trustees Lounge, 1 Silber Way, 9th floor (SMG building)
Reception immediately following
Time/Date: Tuesday, November 13, 2012, 5:30 p.m.

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