Grace and Necessity: Reflections on Art and Love
Autor The Right Reverend and Right Honourable Lord Williams of Oystermouth Rowan Williamsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 mar 2006
In this original book Rowan Williams sketches out a new understanding of how human beings open themselves to transcendence. Drawing on the French Catholic philosopher Jacques Maritain, the Welsh poet and painter David Jones, and the American novelist Mary Flannery O`Connor, Rowan Williams fulfils his ambition for Christianity to engage with contemporary culture, and that a man who holds highest office in the Church has the time and intellectual energy to write such original theology is encouraging for us all.
'Unabashedly erudite in tone, this book may appeal to scholars and readers interested in grappling with a debate that has probably been engaged as long as there have been artists and theologians.' Publishers Weekly
'Discusses important issues in a profound and original way.' Church of England Newspaper
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826481504
ISBN-10: 0826481507
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Ediția:New ed.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0826481507
Pagini: 144
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.22 kg
Ediția:New ed.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
His previous book of this stature (Lost Icons) was a huge bestseller. It was serialised in the Times and widely discussed and read.
Cuprins
Introduction1. Exploration of aesthetics: covering artists as wide ranging as Gwen John, Jean Cocteau and the writings of Jacques Maritain.2. Art and Sacrament: The Anglo Saxon response to the ideas of Continental thinking in the 20th Century. 3. The US Response: Flannery O'Connor4. Art and Intelligence. Towards a new theology.
Recenzii
'Unabashedly erudite in tone, this book may appeal to scholars and readers interested in grappling with a debate that has probably been engaged as long as there have been artists and theologians.' Publishers Weekly
'Discusses important issues in a profound and original way.' Church of England Newspaper
"Grace and Necessity is not easy reading, but it is a very valuable contribution to the task of enunciating aesthetic grounded in Christian theology, a project which began with the creation of those classic works of art, the Gospels. It has proceeded fitfully since...Rowan Williams has stuck a sharp needle into the balloon of contemporary theories which emphasize that the only intelligible thing about a work of art, of any kind, is the individual's experience of it. For believers and unbelievers alike, this is very precious indeed. One can only hope that its insights will be popularized."
"Grace and Necessity, an expanded version of Rowan Williams' Clark Lectures, delivered earlier this year, reflects on 'the relationship between Christian thought and the practice of the arts' ...The work 'challenges appearances', and 'challenges pre-existing assumptions about knowledge itself. It makes claims about being but also about how being is adequately known'."- titusonenine, July 16, 2005
"Archbishop of Canterbury Williams continues and adds to the renaissance in Christian reflection on theological aesthetics with rigorous essays on Flannery O'Connor, the French theologian Jacques Maritain and the English artist David Jones. For Williams, art is like God's making of the world in creation: it reflects and embodies the artist without collapsing the maker into what is made." Reviewed in Christian Century, December 2006
Grace and Necessity has about itself no little artistry
"The book preserves the engaging character of talk, while giving references and notes that are valuable for scholars. Professors and students of theological aesthetics will find this an enjoyable and insightful study of a particular period in the development of the field."- Worship Magazine, March 2006
'Discusses important issues in a profound and original way.' Church of England Newspaper
"Grace and Necessity is not easy reading, but it is a very valuable contribution to the task of enunciating aesthetic grounded in Christian theology, a project which began with the creation of those classic works of art, the Gospels. It has proceeded fitfully since...Rowan Williams has stuck a sharp needle into the balloon of contemporary theories which emphasize that the only intelligible thing about a work of art, of any kind, is the individual's experience of it. For believers and unbelievers alike, this is very precious indeed. One can only hope that its insights will be popularized."
"Grace and Necessity, an expanded version of Rowan Williams' Clark Lectures, delivered earlier this year, reflects on 'the relationship between Christian thought and the practice of the arts' ...The work 'challenges appearances', and 'challenges pre-existing assumptions about knowledge itself. It makes claims about being but also about how being is adequately known'."- titusonenine, July 16, 2005
"Archbishop of Canterbury Williams continues and adds to the renaissance in Christian reflection on theological aesthetics with rigorous essays on Flannery O'Connor, the French theologian Jacques Maritain and the English artist David Jones. For Williams, art is like God's making of the world in creation: it reflects and embodies the artist without collapsing the maker into what is made." Reviewed in Christian Century, December 2006
Grace and Necessity has about itself no little artistry
"The book preserves the engaging character of talk, while giving references and notes that are valuable for scholars. Professors and students of theological aesthetics will find this an enjoyable and insightful study of a particular period in the development of the field."- Worship Magazine, March 2006