Attention All!
We are delighted to announce that the university will be hosting Professor Asa Simon Mittman for a talk titled ‘Christian Maps, Jewish Monsters’ on 20 March. Please see below for the full details of this event.
Date: Tuesday 20 March 2018
Time: Reception 6:00pm, Public Lecture 6:30pm
Location: Reception – Stephen Langton Building Foyer, Lecture – Stephen Langton Lecture Theatre
Lecture Title: Christian Maps, Jewish Monsters
Speaker: Asa Simon Mittman, Professor and Chair, Art & Art History, California State University, Chico
Lecture Abstract and Speaker Bio:
In ‘Christian Maps, Jewish Monsters’, Mittman explores a curious, fraught image of idol-worship on the Hereford World Map, produced in England c. 1300. This massive, encyclopaedic sheet has been seen as a terrestrial map, a universal map, a biblical compendium, a history, and on. In the south-east quadrant of the world, in Arabia, between the two arms of the Red Sea, we find the Jews, a mass of four men in vaguely monastic robes, kneeling in prayer before an altar on which squats Mahun, an ugly, twisting calf that is, despite the prevalent use of gold throughout the map, decidedly not golden. The calf-idol is raising its hind leg to defecate on the altar. The image of the defecating polytheistic-Jewish-Islamic Calf-Muhammed is animate, but ought not be so; it is a man-made thing, but it acts. The image could function as it does by being contained within the geohistorical framework of medieval cartography, a construct that allows for the smooth imbrications of times (contemporary and past) and places (there and here). By looking at this figure, and then zooming out to consider the massive map, as a whole, Mittman disentangles this complex, aggregate image, and its implications for our understanding of medieval England. In doing so, he provides a point of reflection on our own present context, and its contemporary depictions of non-Christians.
Asa Simon Mittman is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Art & Art History at California State University, Chico, where he teaches modules on ancient and medieval art, monsters, and film. Mittman’s collaborative work with Susan Kim on the Beowulf Manscript, Inconceivable Beasts: The Wonders of the East in the Beowulf Manuscript (AMCRS, 2013), won a Millard Meiss Publication Grant from the College Art Association and an ISAS (International Society of Anglo-Saxonists) Best Book Prize, and his book Maps and Monsters in Medieval England(Routledge, 2006) is a foundational Monster Studies text. Other collaborative works include, with Peter Dendle, a Research Companion to Monsters and the Monstrous (Ashgate/Routledge, 2012), and, with Marcus Hensel, the forthcoming with the Medieval Institute Press/Arc-Humanities Press, Classic Readings on Monster Theory: Demonstrare (Volume 1) and Primary Sources on Monsters: Demonstrare (Volume 2). Mittman has also contributed to the growth of Monster Studies through the creation of academic communities such as the Material Collective and MEARCSTAPA (Monsters: the Experimental Association for the Research of Cryptozoology through Scholarly Theory and Practical Application). His current projects include research on the Franks Casket, on representations of Jews on medieval world maps, and, with Sherry C. M. Lindquist, curation of the exhibit Terrors, Aliens, and Wonders: Medieval Monsters at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York.
To book onto this event, please see our Eventbrite Page.