Bits of late Roman coinage, the mutilated torso of a marble Venus, blue debris from an early medieval glassworks, and the powder rasped from the reputed tomb of Mary Magdalene—these tantalizing mementos of human history found scattered throughout the landscape of southeastern France are the points of departure for Gustaf Sobin's lyrical narrative. A companion volume to his acclaimed Luminous Debris, Ladder of Shadows picks up where the former left off: with late antiquity, covering a period from roughly the third to the thirteenth century. Here Sobin offers brilliant readings of late Roman and early Christian ruins in his adopted region of Provence, sifting through iconographic, architectural, and sacramental vestiges to shed light on nothing less than the existential itself.
Ladder of Shadows Reflecting on Medieval Vestige in Provence and Languedoc
About the Book
Reviews
"Ladder of Shadows exhibits the same finely tuned intelligence as in the first volume. Sobin crafts precisely and elegantly cut gems."—Jeffery Beam Oyster Boy Review“In Ladder of Shadows, Gustaf Sobin is 'always in search of the kind of phenomena that might, potentially, confer sense upon one's own existence.' In the course of this search, Sobin's essays enact a lovely and compelling labor of making the past present, while also making the present unfold and open itself to history.”—Joshua Clover, author of The Totality for Kids
“Gustaf Sobin's Ladder of Shadows is to Provençal consciousness what his perfect sensorium of poetry is to a rose and the sound of a river. Sobin's writing is a gift that we never learn to expect; it always surprises.”—Michael McClure, poet and playwright
“I feel as though I just walked across southern France from 27 B.C. to A.D. 1200 accompanied by a really smart, articulate, and avid local insider. Along the way he introduced me to monks, potters, stonemasons, architects, glassblowers, farmers still using late Neolithic methods, woodcutters, and salt dryers. Perhaps the reader should be warned not to open the book unless there are several days of free time available. It is almost impossible to put it down.”—Dean MacCannell, author of The Tourist: A New Theory of the Leisure Class
Table of Contents
Foreword, by Michael Ignatieff
Introduction
Apt: Reading an Antique City as Palimpsest
Desolate Treasure
Crypto-Christianity: The Sarcophagi of Arles, I
Terra Sigillata
Relics: Membra Martyrum as Living Current
Venus Disfigured
The Blossoming of Numbers: The Baptistery at Riez
The Deletion of Shadow: The Sarcophagi of Arles, II
City of God
Laying the Dragon Low
The Dark Ages: A History of Omissions
The Blue Tears of Sainte-Marthe
The Blind Arcade: Reflections on a Carolingian Sarcophagus
Celestial Paradigms
Vaulting the Nave
The Dome: Architecture as Antecedent
Classical Roots, Evangelical Branches
Vanished Scaffolds and the Structures Thereof
Incastellamento: Perching the Village, I
Incastellamento: Perching the Village, II
(The Circulades of Languedoc)
Faja Oscura
Psalmodi
The Fifth Element: From Manna to Exaction
Mary Magdalene the Odoriferous
The Death of Genesis
Notes
Index