Earthly Treasures
maps the presence, position, and use in the narrative of a variety
of material objects in Marguerite de Navarre's Heptaméron.
Featured in the text is a wide selection of objects, ranging from
tapestries with scripture passages woven into the borders, fine
arts paintings, and chalices incised with proverbs, to emblems,
table linens, Bibles or manuscripts, clothing, masks, stage props,
jewelry, furniture, and foodstuffs. Although the presence of such
material objects seems paradoxical, given the scriptural mandate
to disregard things of this world, and to "store up treasure"
in heaven instead, Marguerite found license to use such objects
both in the Bible and in Martin Luther’s Table Talk.
Marguerite, sister of the Renaissance collector king François
Ier, was surrounded by beautiful and costly objects, and she used
them in her narrative to highlight the disparity between life as
it is and, in a theological sense, life as it should be. Because
of her social standing, she influenced other evangelical writers
(such as Bonaventure Des Périers and Jacques Yver) to use
material objects similarly: as concrete, iconic arrows both indicting
worldliness and pointing the way out of the world.
The Heptaméron has not formerly been read as the
model for, and progenitor of, a new way of treating the world from
an evangelical standpoint. This innovative approach is predicated
on an acknowledgment of the plethora of material objects adorning
the early modern universe, as well as the cultivation of an attitude
of suspicion about the circumstances of their production, the potential
for distortion, and the need for the fallen world to be, in a truly
Protestant project, realigned with its scriptural template.
“In addition to the scholarship and the vast scope of its
research, this book offers an unexplored facet of the Heptaméron
and of Marguerite de Navarre’s thought.” —Regine
Reynolds-Cornell, who has written extensively on the work of Marguerite
de Navarre
For further reviews, see:
The Chronicle of Higher Education June 22, 2007.
Reference & Research Book News Aug. 2007.
Catharine Randall, Fordham University, is the author of five
books and some fifty articles and book chapters. Her current project
is a book-length study of the Huguenots and Camisards in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries. A book manuscript about the Huguenots
and Camisards in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries entitled
From a Far Country is currently under review, and her latest
project is an updated edition of a selection of the Jesuit Relations
entitled Going in by Their Door for Fordham University
Press. Her professional career has been oriented around exploring
the constraints that varieties of Protestantism imposed on writers
of particular confessions (such as Calvinism or Lutheranism) as
well as the permissions for artistic expression that—somewhat
surprisingly—may be discerned in those theological systems.
ISBN-13: 978-1-55753-449-1
2007. Vol. 40. x, 354 pp. Paper $43.95
Window display in Stanley Coulter Hall, April 16-23, 2007.
|


Poster for Randall’s
Earthly Treasures. Graphic © 2007 Jupiterimages Corporation

<—prev
vol — next vol—>
|