Redcrosse: Remaking Religious Poetry for Today's World
Editat de Ewan Fernieen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 noi 2012
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441138996
ISBN-10: 1441138994
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441138994
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Companion website features interviews with contributors, film footage of public performances and reviews.
Notă biografică
Ewan Fernie is Professor and Chair of Shakespeare Studies at the Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham, UK. He is the author of Shame in Shakespeare, the editor of Spiritual Shakespeares and general editor (with Simon Palfrey) of the Shakespeare Now! series.
Cuprins
Contributors \ Acknowledgements \ Part I: Reflections \ 1. Through the Red Cross Ewan Fernie \ 2. For Real Salley Vickers \ 3. A Desire for the Impossible Andrew Shanks \ 4. The Poet's Tale Michael Symmons Roberts \ 5. Fight the Good Fight? Sarah Apetrei \ 6. From Romance to Ritual: Redcrosse and Spenser's Faerie Queene John Milbank \ Part II: Redcrosse \ Redcrosse: A New Celebration of England and St George Ewan Fernie, Michael Symmons Roberts, Jo Shapcott and Andrew Shanks, and featuring a new poem from Andrew Motion
Recenzii
'The Redcrosse project has demonstrated how true liturgy is a quest for liturgy and a continuing self-questioning. It cannot evade the specificity of place and circumstance, even though these might lean towards bias: being reconciled to the tendril of our own path is our only way to attain a specific glimpse of the universal. So here the ambivalent legacy of the English Red Cross and the cult of St George are embraced and yet ritually purged with the help of the mythopoeic vision of Edmund Spenser: the blood of ugly victory becomes the pelican blood of suffering and searching, and triumph is itself turned into the miraculous arrival of always particular and always social grace. The essays in the volume take forward the task of the liturgy and open the way to more such awakenings in future.'
'A collective quest for renewal and reform, which invests in the future of poetry by rewedding liturgy and literature. Assembling a stellar team of poets, scholars, and clergy, this civic experiment with the legacy of Spenser and the legend of St. George aims to reconnect people and peoples, faith and faiths, through the participatory power of the poetic Word.'
'A moving and provocative book, often baffling, and even knowingly quixotic in its accounts of the hard work of these devoted poets, scholars, clerics, and theologians in shaping from Spenser's wild allegorical romance a 'questing liturgy' for the English Church of today. It is far from what the ordinary reader of Spenser (if such a creature exists!) might expect, but the questions this book poses stay with me.'
'This is a valuable and generous book. Valuable because it exemplifies how profound and ancient symbols of our culture may become active again in the modern imagination. Generous because this project yearns to give and include, to listen and confess, undaunted by the authority of the past or by the face of opposition.'
"How do we think about identity in ways that don't reflect anxiety, fear of the other, uncritical adulation of our past and all the other pitfalls that surround this subject? The Redcrosse project manages to negotiate these difficulties with immense imaginative energy and honesty: no sour notes, no attempt to overcompensate by desperately overapologetic rhetoric,simply a recovery of deep roots and generous vision. It's a contemporary working out of some of the great and inexhaustible legacy of Blake, a unique contribution to what is often a pretty sterile discussion of who we are in these islands."
What light can poetry shed on religious belief and national identity? Redcrosse...is a collection of essays in which the editor, a Shakespearean scholar, theologian Andrew Shanks, and contemporary poets Jo Shapcott, Michael Symonds Roberts and Andrew Motion reflect on this question... This is an important resource for St George's Day.
'A collective quest for renewal and reform, which invests in the future of poetry by rewedding liturgy and literature. Assembling a stellar team of poets, scholars, and clergy, this civic experiment with the legacy of Spenser and the legend of St. George aims to reconnect people and peoples, faith and faiths, through the participatory power of the poetic Word.'
'A moving and provocative book, often baffling, and even knowingly quixotic in its accounts of the hard work of these devoted poets, scholars, clerics, and theologians in shaping from Spenser's wild allegorical romance a 'questing liturgy' for the English Church of today. It is far from what the ordinary reader of Spenser (if such a creature exists!) might expect, but the questions this book poses stay with me.'
'This is a valuable and generous book. Valuable because it exemplifies how profound and ancient symbols of our culture may become active again in the modern imagination. Generous because this project yearns to give and include, to listen and confess, undaunted by the authority of the past or by the face of opposition.'
"How do we think about identity in ways that don't reflect anxiety, fear of the other, uncritical adulation of our past and all the other pitfalls that surround this subject? The Redcrosse project manages to negotiate these difficulties with immense imaginative energy and honesty: no sour notes, no attempt to overcompensate by desperately overapologetic rhetoric,simply a recovery of deep roots and generous vision. It's a contemporary working out of some of the great and inexhaustible legacy of Blake, a unique contribution to what is often a pretty sterile discussion of who we are in these islands."
What light can poetry shed on religious belief and national identity? Redcrosse...is a collection of essays in which the editor, a Shakespearean scholar, theologian Andrew Shanks, and contemporary poets Jo Shapcott, Michael Symonds Roberts and Andrew Motion reflect on this question... This is an important resource for St George's Day.