Picturing History: The Plague

Oct 12, 2006 19:06

The story goes something like this. During the Black Death the plague took the shape of an old woman, who hobbled from village to village, farm to farm. She’d be in old, raggedy clothes and carried a rake and a broom. If you saw her use the rake that meant that some of the people in the area would die. If she used the broom then everyone, yourself included, would be swept away.






The old woman was called Plague or Old Woman Plague. She smelled of death, dust and nothingness.




These pictures were made by the Norwegian painter Theodor Kittelsen. He is best known for illustrating fairytales, but considered his cycle of plague pictures to be his best work.




When I was ten these pictures were illustrations in my history book. They scared me, and most of my classmates, silly. I met one of these former school friends a little while ago, and we started to talk about our schooldays. He said: “You know - it’s weird, but whenever I think of the Middle Ages I remember those plague pictures. It’s like they’re superimposed on everything else.” He admitted that he had trouble seeing the Middel Ages as anything other than dark an scary.
So I guess it's not just how we write history, it's how we choose to picture it as well.

picturing history, kittelsen

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