

Her most recent book was awarded the 1996 Jacques Barzun Prize by the American Philosophical Society for the best work in cultural history. One of her most important contributions has been to reconcile late 20th-century theory with traditional modes of historical analysis.

Professor Bynum writes widely on the theory and practice of somatics, the study of the human body, both in itself and as a symbol. She has published four major books on such subjects as the maternal, nurturing aspects of Jesus ( Jesus as Mother) the role of food in late-medieval spirituality and its impact on the spirituality of Europeans, especially women ( Holy Feast and Holy Fast) Fragmentation and Redemption, a collection of essays on the human body, especially its vulnerability to decay and most recently, The Resurrection of the Body, Christian thought and sentiment from St. Caroline Walker Bynum, Morris and Alma Schapiro Professor of History at Columbia University, has remapped our understanding of the Middle Ages with her groundbreaking studies.
