Iris Murdoch and the Others: A Writer in Dialogue with Theology
Autor Professor Paul S. Fiddesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 mai 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780567703385
ISBN-10: 056770338X
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 056770338X
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Exemplification of the relation between theology and literature in a way that does not concern those writing on Murdoch and philosophy
Notă biografică
Paul S. Fiddes is a Fellow of the British Academy, Professor of Systematic Theology in the University of Oxford, UK, and Principal Emeritus of Regent's Park College, Oxford, UK
Cuprins
Introduction. What Kind of Dialogue? Chapter 1 Iris Murdoch and Love of the Truth Chapter 2On 'God' and 'Good': Murdoch's Dialogue with Modern TheologiansChapter 3The Sublime and the Beautiful: Bringing Murdoch into conversation with Gerard Manley HopkinsChapter 4The Sublime, The Conflicted Self, and Attention to the Other: Bringing Murdoch into Conversation with Julia KristevaChapter 5Language and Writing: Murdoch in Dialogue with Jacques Derrida Chapter 6The Void and the Passion: Murdoch in Dialogue with Simon WeilCoda. With and Beyond Simone Weil: the Dialogue between Murdoch and TheologyBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
Fiddes' careful and detailed readings offer new insights into Murdoch, but also into the task of theology itself.
This text is an excellent addition to the corpus of work Fiddes has published on the interrelationship between theology and literature. ... this book would be worth reading by those interested in the relationship between theology, literature, and philosophy.
Lovers of theology and of Iris Murdoch-her novels and philosophy of the selfless good-often leave amazed she could reject theological traditions clearly informing all she wrote and read. Paul Fiddes carefully attends to this puzzle. His is a dialogue of clarity and discovery, for which many of us amazed by Murdoch have long been hoping.
The intersection of Iris Murdoch's professed atheism and her passionate interest in theological questions has long fascinated readers. In Iris Murdoch and the Others: A Writer in Dialogue with Theology, Paul Fiddes explores her life-long interest in theology with a depth and a sophistication which is unmatched. Bringing Murdoch into dialogue with Weil, Derrida, Kristeva, Hopkins, and many others, Fiddes shows Murdoch's relevance for reflection on what it means to travel with and without faith in the modern world. I know of no other work which addresses these important questions as well.
At the heart of this exemplary study of Iris Murdoch are close readings of the novels which enlighten the dialogues between Murdoch and an array of theologians and philosophers from Tillich and Bonhoeffer to Kant and Derrida. Fiddes shows us how the conversations between literature, theology and philosophy should be sustained.
Paul Fiddes's scholarly and accessible discussions of Iris Murdoch's novels unveil what he describes as a 'theology of revelation', where their 'ordinariness' is brought into the mystical realm of theological discourse. They are, he suggests, a place where 'God speaks'. His intricate and thoughtful exploration of Murdoch's 'conversations' with other philosophers and fellow writers is literary criticism at its finest. This is an original and thought-provoking work that will enrich the way Murdoch's novels will now be read and interpreted.
A vivid concern with the quality of attention is at the heart of Iris Murdoch's work: to others, to the Good, and to the contingencies that shape a life. This quality is also evident throughout the critical conversations - with modern theology, and with G. M. Hopkins, Julia Kristeva, Jacques Derrida, and Simone Weil - that animate Paul Fiddes's compelling new study. Here is a Murdoch with striking contemporary relevance, which grows out of a sustained examination of the formative, creative tension with Christian theology and imagery that permeates her work. The result is an acute and genuine dialogue that Murdoch herself would have leapt to continue.
Fiddles reminds that theological literature can take many forms... It reminds us that literature can also be a way into a deeper relationship with God and to greater insight into ourselves and the human condition.
This text is an excellent addition to the corpus of work Fiddes has published on the interrelationship between theology and literature. ... this book would be worth reading by those interested in the relationship between theology, literature, and philosophy.
Lovers of theology and of Iris Murdoch-her novels and philosophy of the selfless good-often leave amazed she could reject theological traditions clearly informing all she wrote and read. Paul Fiddes carefully attends to this puzzle. His is a dialogue of clarity and discovery, for which many of us amazed by Murdoch have long been hoping.
The intersection of Iris Murdoch's professed atheism and her passionate interest in theological questions has long fascinated readers. In Iris Murdoch and the Others: A Writer in Dialogue with Theology, Paul Fiddes explores her life-long interest in theology with a depth and a sophistication which is unmatched. Bringing Murdoch into dialogue with Weil, Derrida, Kristeva, Hopkins, and many others, Fiddes shows Murdoch's relevance for reflection on what it means to travel with and without faith in the modern world. I know of no other work which addresses these important questions as well.
At the heart of this exemplary study of Iris Murdoch are close readings of the novels which enlighten the dialogues between Murdoch and an array of theologians and philosophers from Tillich and Bonhoeffer to Kant and Derrida. Fiddes shows us how the conversations between literature, theology and philosophy should be sustained.
Paul Fiddes's scholarly and accessible discussions of Iris Murdoch's novels unveil what he describes as a 'theology of revelation', where their 'ordinariness' is brought into the mystical realm of theological discourse. They are, he suggests, a place where 'God speaks'. His intricate and thoughtful exploration of Murdoch's 'conversations' with other philosophers and fellow writers is literary criticism at its finest. This is an original and thought-provoking work that will enrich the way Murdoch's novels will now be read and interpreted.
A vivid concern with the quality of attention is at the heart of Iris Murdoch's work: to others, to the Good, and to the contingencies that shape a life. This quality is also evident throughout the critical conversations - with modern theology, and with G. M. Hopkins, Julia Kristeva, Jacques Derrida, and Simone Weil - that animate Paul Fiddes's compelling new study. Here is a Murdoch with striking contemporary relevance, which grows out of a sustained examination of the formative, creative tension with Christian theology and imagery that permeates her work. The result is an acute and genuine dialogue that Murdoch herself would have leapt to continue.
Fiddles reminds that theological literature can take many forms... It reminds us that literature can also be a way into a deeper relationship with God and to greater insight into ourselves and the human condition.