Lauren Carroll Harris

CARROLL HARRIS_Lauren web

Lauren Carroll Harris is a non-fiction writer whose work has been published in New Statesman, The Brooklyn Rail, Literary Hub, Los Angeles Review of Books, MUBI Notebook, Sydney Review of Books, The Sydney Morning Herald and in the collections Open Secrets: Essays on the Writing Life (Giramondo, 2022) and Outside the Frame: Art and the Moving Image (Perimeter Editions, 2023). Her debut book, We Don’t Belong to Ourselves, is due to be published by Ultimo Press this year.

Articles

More than maternity

Non-fictionPrinciple among art-history instances of breastfeeding are paintings, sculptures, tapestries and stained-glass art in churches that relay key Biblical moments of the Virgin Mary nursing the baby Jesus. Should you find yourself in the corridors of the Louvre, in the same halls where kings and princes are eternalised, one singular image of breastfeeding will make its way towards you time and time again: that of the Virgin Mary nursing the baby Jesus, which emerged in the twelfth century and proliferated in full bloom from the fourteenth as her cult of worship grew. In art, the nursing Virgin is called the Madonna Lactans, and she is a sanctity. Most of all, as the Church’s model of maternity, she is silent.

Share Contributor
Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.