Corpus Christi: The Eucharist in Late Medieval Culture

Corpus Christi: The Eucharist in Late Medieval Culture

by Miri Rubin (Author)

Synopsis

This book studies later medieval culture [c. 1150-1500] through its central symbol: the eucharist. From the twelfth century onwards the eucharist was designed by the Church as the foremost sacrament. The claim that this ritual brought into presence Christ's own body, and offered it to believers, underpinned the sacramental system and the clerical mediation upon which it depended. The book explores the context in which the sacramental world was created and the cultural processes through which it was disseminated, interpreted and used. With attention to the variety of eucharistic meanings and practices - in procession on the feast of Corpus Christi, devotions, prayers, drama, in dissent, abuse and doubt - the author reveals and considers ways in which a religious culture is used as a language for the articulation of order and power, as well as for the most private explorations. The book moves from the 'design' of the eucharist in the twelfth century to its re-design in the sixteenth - a story of the emergence of a symbol, its use and interpretation and final transformation.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 452
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 29 Oct 1992

ISBN 10: 0521438055
ISBN 13: 9780521438056

Media Reviews
'Miri Rubin writes with a lithe and subtle forcefulness ... a work of originality, learning and imagination.' The Times Literary Supplement
'The avowed aim of Dr Rubin's book is to decode the eucharistic language used by theologians and the rituals of eucharistic worship in the later middle ages ... an erudite and lively study.' The Times Higher Education Supplement