Given our enchantment with the endless stream of innovations and immersive experiences offered up by the culture industry, any of us could be forgiven for believing that a simple, modest exhibition dedicated to illuminated manuscripts would be stodgy and inconsequential. Yet, in the dim glow of ancient vellum and gold leaf, timeworn treasures still have the capacity to strike a contemporary chord. On a recent visit to the Getty Center in Los Angeles, I experienced this resonance anew. In an exhibition that showcased the peculiarities of the medieval imagination, viewers were confronted with something at once outlandish and unsettlingly familiar.
In this essay, written for Plough, I examine how the expansion of our world through technology calls for us to rethink our place in God's creation. Just as medieval people had to navigate unfamiliar cultures through exploration and trade, we too must question how we adapt to the vast, interconnected reality our new technologies bring.
Book of the Marvels of the World, India, detail, ca.1460–65. Illuminated by the Master of the Geneva Boccaccio. Colored washes, gold, and ink on parchment. Getty Museum. Ms. 124 (2022.15), fol. 5.
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