In the fifteenth‐century Play of the Sacrament, a group of Jewish men torture a consecrated wafer, seeking to prove or disprove the Real Presence. The play juxtaposes their misguided empiricism, rooted in stereotypes about the literalism of Jewish reading, with an experimentalist hermeneutics that recognizes that knowledge of the material world requires the intellectual cognition of imperceptible operations. This hermeneutics, associated with later scientific inquiry, emerges from a broader scholastic project that approached transubstantiation with the tools of natural philosophy. The essay considers, in turn, how the play leverages theatrical devices to prompt its audience to grapple with the physical impossibilities of eucharistic change. It encourages the spectating Christians, like literal‐minded Jews, to long for spectacular theatrical effects that will furnish empirical proof of transubstantiation. However, the artificiality or absence of these effects ultimately signals that eucharistic change is not an observable phenomenon that can be confirmed with the senses.
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May 2024
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Research Article|
May 01 2024
Spectacular Absence, Spectacular Presence: Experimenting with the Eucharist in the Play of the Sacrament Available to Purchase
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2024) 54 (2): 271–298.
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Bernardo S. Hinojosa; Spectacular Absence, Spectacular Presence: Experimenting with the Eucharist in the Play of the Sacrament. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 1 May 2024; 54 (2): 271–298. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/10829636-11130357
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