Since we can see it from our window it stands to reason you can see
our place from Grant's Tomb! The tomb's grand inside but snaking
around its sides are crazy community-made mosaics from the 1970s.
That river we see out our window is a tidal river, its downstream flow reversed twice a day by the rising tide. When the gears shift, as it were, between flowing down and up and back down, it's called "slack water," the water still enough to reflect what's on the other side.
The Met's new show "Making Marvels: Science and Splendor at the Courts of Europe" is about the Kunstkammern of central European worthies as places where early modern science and ingenuity - and luxury - met. The intention seems to be replicating the effect of one of these rooms: we're to marvel at the fascinating objects and, beyond them, the opulent resources and connections of our hosts. All manner of interesting stories might be told about how understandings of "science" changed over this time, or about how these technologies were part of international networks, but mostly we were just supposed to go "Wow!"
Wows there were, of course, like the writing/reading box (1570) above. But I was more intrigued by the bezoar - a kind of ruminant's gallstone, thought to be proof against any poisons, known to Europe through the Silk Roads. A reminder of other sciences, especially when you learn its an Ersatz one, likely composed of a paste of bezoar, clay, silt, crushed shell, amber, musk, resin, narwhal tusk and crushed gemstones. The artificial bezoars were known as Goa stones, after the place they were made (by Jesuits, no less), and thought to be just as effective as their natural counterparts. Tell me more!! Maybe it's just my professional deformation but I sensed religion - also other and different than we conceive of it now - coursing in the background throughout. Marvels, magic, miracles? It surfaced in one of the final objects, in a room of early androids: a model of a Franciscan monk which
walked, beat its breast, turned its head and mouthed blessings, from Spain, c. 1550. It was commissioned by Philip II when one of his sons was healed by a relic of Diego de Alcalá (namesake of San Diego); in gratitude his father vowed "a miracle for a miracle." The machinery of marvels beyond marvels!
Artwork commissioned for the exhibition reprises the layout of Matsunaga's display
In "Theorizing Religion" today I projected this picture of my hand grasping the proffered bronze replica of the hand of Genesis P-Orridge in her "Touching of Hands" (2016). That work is part of the current iteration of Shrine Room Projects (all brilliant) at the Rubin Museum of Art. I'd asked students to go to the museum in lieu of class Monday (thinking I might be late because of a doctor's appointment, though that turned out not to be an issue). The photo was a test of their attendance - I didn't see that many when I went - and I was gratified that most students recognized it; some even grasped it. I'd unwittingly taken my picture from an angle which allowed people to imagine its caption making diametrically opposed claims: 
The "lived religion" segment of "Theorizing Religion" has become quite exciting. My old stalwart, Meredith McGuire's Lived Religion (ch. 2) starts us off. Last year's discovery, Elizabeth Pérez's Religion in the Kitchen: Cooking, Talking, and the Making of Black Atlantic Tradition (chs. 1, 4, 5) builds on it, the last chapter paired today with this year's crush, Tracy Fessendon's Religion around Billie Holiday (intro, ch. 5). We'll continue next week with a visit to the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room and an exhibition about arts and activism at the Rubin Museum of Art, and wrap up with William Connolly's "Evangelical-Capitalist Resonance Machine." There's a little serendipity in there - I'd originally planned something else for Monday but will be late for class because of a doctor's appointment - but it all comes together to a much more complicated picture than I've been able to convey before.
and she basically laid out that project's understanding of religions as internally diverse, evolving and changing, and embedded in all dimensions of human experience. Religious literacy, she argued, is more than knowing the 4 noble truths, 5 pillars, 10 commandments but is rather a method of seeing religion's involvement in life and culture at every scale. (The idea that religion is or should be private was laughed off as unserious.) It's an ambitious project: approaching religion in this way, as scholar, religious person or interfaith chaplain, means resisting understanding faith traditions (including one's own) as monoliths and also becoming aware of how faith traditions (including one's own) support cultural peace or cultural violence. Retreat into one's own spiritual bubble isn't an option!