Modernism and Theology

Modernism and Theology
Title Modernism and Theology PDF eBook
Author Joanna Rzepa
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 450
Release 2021-03-16
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 3030615308

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This is the first book-length study to examine the interface between literary and theological modernisms. It provides a comprehensive account of literary responses to the modernist crisis in Christian theology from a transnational and interdenominational perspective. It offers a cultural history of the period, considering a wide range of literary and historical sources, including novels, drama, poetry, literary criticism, encyclicals, theological and philosophical treatises, periodical publications, and wartime propaganda. By contextualising literary modernism within the cultural, religious, and political landscape, the book reveals fundamental yet largely forgotten connections between literary and theological modernisms. It shows that early-twentieth-century authors, poets, and critics, including Rainer Maria Rilke, T. S. Eliot, and Czesław Miłosz, actively engaged with the debates between modernist and neo-scholastic theologians raging across Europe. These debates contributed to developing new ways of thinking about the relationship between religion and literature, and informed contemporary critical writings on aesthetics and poetics.

Modernism and Christianity

Modernism and Christianity
Title Modernism and Christianity PDF eBook
Author E. Tonning
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 233
Release 2014-01-29
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1137319143

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By theorising the idea of 'formative tensions' between cultural Modernism and Christianity, and by in-depth case studies of James Joyce, David Jones, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, W. H. Auden, Samuel Beckett, the book argues that no coherent account of Modernism can ignore the continuing impact of Christianity.

Modernism and Affect

Modernism and Affect
Title Modernism and Affect PDF eBook
Author Julie Taylor
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages 240
Release 2015-05-17
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0748693270

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This book addresses an under-researched area of modernist studies, reconsidering modernist attitudes towards feeling in the light of the humanities' turn to affect.

Modernism After the Death of God

Modernism After the Death of God
Title Modernism After the Death of God PDF eBook
Author Stephen Kern
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 444
Release 2017-11-22
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1351603175

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Modernism After the Death of God explores the work of seven influential modernists. Friedrich Nietzsche, James Joyce, D. H. Lawrence, André Gide, and Martin Heidegger criticized the destructive impact that they believed Christian sexual morality had had or threatened to have on their love life. Although not a Christian, Freud criticized the negative effect that Christian sexual morality had on his clinical subjects and on Western civilization, while Virginia Woolf condemned how her society was sanctioned by a patriarchal Christian authority. All seven worked to replace the loss or absence of Christian unity with non-Christian unifying projects in their respective fields of philosophy, psychiatry, or literature. The basic structure of their main contributions to modernist culture was a dynamic interaction of radical fragmentation necessitating radical unification that was always in process and never complete.

Modernism, Christianity and Apocalypse

Modernism, Christianity and Apocalypse
Title Modernism, Christianity and Apocalypse PDF eBook
Author
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 407
Release 2014-10-30
Genre Art
ISBN 9004282289

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Modernism, Christianity and Apocalypse stages an encounter between the fields of ‘Modernism and Christianity’ and ‘Apocalypse Studies’. The modernist impulse to ‘make it new’, to transform and reform culture, is an incipiently apocalyptic one, poised between imaginative representations of an Old Era or civilization and the experimental promise of the New. Christianity figures in formative tension with the ‘new’, but its apocalyptic paradigms continued to impact modernist visions of cultural revitalization. In three sections tracing a rough chronology from the late nineteenth century fin de siècle, via interwar conflicts and the rise of ‘political religions’, to post-1945 anxieties such as the Bomb, this thematic is explored in nineteen far-ranging scholarly contributions, outlining a distinctive and fresh interdisciplinary field of study.

The Faith of Modernism

The Faith of Modernism
Title The Faith of Modernism PDF eBook
Author Shailer Mathews
Publisher
Total Pages 200
Release 1924
Genre Modernism
ISBN

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Modernism in Religion

Modernism in Religion
Title Modernism in Religion PDF eBook
Author James Macbride Sterrett
Publisher
Total Pages 226
Release 1922
Genre Modernism (Christian theology)
ISBN

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