HHIA03504U HIS, The Word of God in Early Modern Europe
Module I-VI [MA Programme, 2008-Curriculum]
MA-elective: [MA-elective Programme, 2008-Curriculum]
Internal BA-elective for BA students of History: [BA-elective studies, 2013-Curriculum]
The Word of God in Early Modern Europe
Early modern Europe (c. 1450-1750) witnessed major
cultural transformations, each of them substantially altering the
significance and function of the Bible. Christian Humanism paved
the way for a Bible in the original languages (Hebrew and Greek)
rather than the Latin version; the printing revolution turned the
Bible into a fixed text and a commodity available to many readers;
the Protestant Reformation made the Scriptures the sole authority
in religious affairs and turned the Scriptures into the
infrastructure of a new religious culture; the turn to vernacular
languages materialized in a wave of translations of the Bible to
all the major European languages.
This course explores what happened to the Bible in a time of cultural and religious upheavals. It will focus on the text of the Bible, its functions and its readers. The scope of the course, however, is broader and more ambitious. During the course we will explore transformations in the perceptions of the Word of God, here understood as a verbal and authoritative revelation that could take a textual form, but also vocal or visual; that could be written, printed, read, read aloud, preached or sung; that could be authentic or corrupt, reproduced as an original or translated; indeed that could be divine or human. Thus, while we will follow the changes made to the book of the Bible during the period, we will explore how the Word of God was changing. Two trends will be followed: the textualizing of God’s Word and the humanizing of God’s Word. The first trend made Scriptures into an exact written representation of the divine; the second exposed the Bible as a book expressing human knowledge rather than God’s Word.
The course adopts a theoretical perspective that privileges
textual forms and various media as shapers of meaning. Ultimately,
the course will provide participants with tools for studying both
the history of the Bible, and, indeed more importantly, how
encounters with the Word of God in early modern Europe was changing
history.
Course objectives (clarification of some of the
objectives stipulated in the curriculum):
• to understand the fundamental shifts in the history of God’s Word
in the period
• to get acquainted with the multiple readings in and experiences
of the Bible that characterized the period
• to study textual (as well as visual) sources regarding the
history of God’s Word
• to reflect upon how Scriptures was formed through the media and
forms in which it was transmitted
- Elizabeth L. Eisenstein: The Printing Revolution in Early
Modern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2005 (2nd edition)
or reprint as Canto Classics edition, 2012.
- Lee Palmer Wandel: The Reformation: Towards a New
History. Cambridge University Press, 2011.
- Klaus Scholder: The Birth of Modern Critical Theology:
Origins and Problems of Biblical Criticism in the Seventeenth
Century. London: SCM Press, 1990.
- Alistair E. McGrath: The Intellectual Origins of the European
Reformation. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub., 2004 2nd edition
[e-book via REX].
- Allan K. Jenkins and Patrick Preston: Biblical Scholarship
and the Church: A Sixteenth-century Crisis of Authority.
Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2007 [e-book via REX].
- Category
- Hours
- Class Instruction
- 56
- Total
- 56
You must select 4 out of the 14 courses [Module I-VI / Module T5/T6] offered to be certain to have a seat on a course.
Individual Elective Study:form (requires login) shall be sent to e-mail: anlum@hum.ku.dk no later than 2nd December 2013.
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Other under invigilation
Criteria for exam assesment
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- HHIA03504U
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterBachelor choice,Full Degree Master choice
- Duration
- 1 semester
- Placement
- Spring
- Schedule
- See scheme link
- Study board
- Study Board of Archaeology, Ethnology, Greek & Latin, History
Contracting department
- SAXO-Institute - Archaeology, Ethnology, Greek & Latin, History
Course responsibles
- Avner Shamir (gdl628@hum.ku.dk)