Christian Fantasy: From 1200 to the PresentUniversity of Notre Dame Press, 1992 - 356 páginas This is the first account of invented stories of the Christian supernatural, of fantasies that depict imagined forms of heaven or hell, angel or devil, world and creator; it considers their growth and changes from the time of Dante to the present day. Relatively infrequent, such works nevertheless for centuries represented some of the highest aspirations of art. Works considered here include the French Queste del Saint Graal, Dante's Commedia, the Middle English Pearl, the first book of Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Marlowe's Dr. Faustus, Milton's Paradise Lost, Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress, Swedenborg's Heaven and Hell and poems by Blake; and, from the post-Romantic and increasingly less 'Christian' period, the fantasies of George MacDonald, Charles Kingsley, Charles Williams, C. S. Lewis and many others. In the development of these works, a primary issue is found to be the fantasy-making imagination itself, at first seen as a potential obstacle to plain Christian purpose, but more recently given freer rein in the new aim of demonstrating God's existence in a more secular world. The picture that emerges is of a literary mode which becomes more fictive and indirect in its presentation of Christian vision. |
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Página 55
... Spenser to them . But neither , not even Tasso ( who may have imposed its meaning on his story retrospectively ) , shows anything quite like the allegorical tendency of Spenser , or his consistent remoteness from the real or historical ...
... Spenser to them . But neither , not even Tasso ( who may have imposed its meaning on his story retrospectively ) , shows anything quite like the allegorical tendency of Spenser , or his consistent remoteness from the real or historical ...
Página 56
... Spenser's work , thus seen , has its allegorical links rather with the genre of the psychomachia . The second answer is that Spenser intends The Faerie Queene to work precisely by being ' a darke conceit ' . On this view the reader is ...
... Spenser's work , thus seen , has its allegorical links rather with the genre of the psychomachia . The second answer is that Spenser intends The Faerie Queene to work precisely by being ' a darke conceit ' . On this view the reader is ...
Página 61
... Spenser ' meant ' his narrative to seem at variance with his meaning . - It seems so clear , so much to answer to the character of the poem , that this reading seems the ' right ' one . And yet why should Spenser align his account of ...
... Spenser ' meant ' his narrative to seem at variance with his meaning . - It seems so clear , so much to answer to the character of the poem , that this reading seems the ' right ' one . And yet why should Spenser align his account of ...
Contenido
The French Queste del Saint Graal | 12 |
The Commedia | 21 |
The Middle English Pearl | 42 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
allegory angels Anodos Beatrice becomes Bible biblical Blake Bunyan C. S. Lewis character Charles Williams Christ Christian fantasy Church Commedia creation Dante Dante's death described desire devil divine dragon Duessa earth eternal evil fact Faerie Queene Fairy Land faith fantastic worlds Faustus Faustus's feel figure further God's Grail Heaven and Hell Hideous Strength Holy human idea imagery imagination invented J. R. R. Tolkien journey Kingsley Kingsley's lady Lewis's Lilith Lion literary literature London look MacDonald Medieval Mephostophilis Milton mind Modern Fantasy moral mystic myth narrative nature North Wind novel Paradise Lost pattern Pearl Perelandra Phantastes picture Pilgrim's Progress planet play poem poet portrays Princess and Curdie Purgatory realise reality Redcrosse Satan science fiction seems seen sense Shardik significance soul Spenser spiritual story supernatural Swedenborg Tamburlaine tells theology things Tolkien true truth University Press Victorian vision Water-Babies writers