Late Medieval Christianity's encounter with miraculous materials viewed in the context of changing conceptions of matter itself.
In the period between 1150 and 1550, an increasing number of Christians in western Europe made pilgrimage to places where material objects¿among them paintings, statues, relics, pieces of wood, earth, stones, and Eucharistic wafers¿allegedly erupted into life by such activities as bleeding, weeping, and walking about. Challenging Christians both to seek ever more frequent encounter with miraculous matter and to turn to an inward piety that rejected material objects of devotion, such phenomena were by the fifteenth century at the heart of religious practice and polemic. In Christian Materiality, Caroline Walker Bynum describes the miracles themselves, discusses the problems they presented for both church authorities and the ordinary faithful, and probes the basic scientific and religious assumptions about matter that lay behind them. She also analyzes the proliferation of religious art in the later Middle Ages and argues that it called attention to its materiality in sophisticated ways that explain both the animation of images and the hostility to them on the part of iconoclasts.