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Blowing Clover, Falling Rain
W. Travis Helms
其他書名
A Theological Commentary on the Poetic Canon of the American Religion
出版
Wipf and Stock Publishers
, 2020-11-06
主題
Religion / Christianity / Literature & the Arts
Religion / Christian Theology / General
ISBN
1725258404
9781725258402
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=KE8TEAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The field of
theopoetics
explores the ways in which we “make God” (present)—particularly through language. This book explores questions of theopoetics as they relate to the central poetry of the American Sublime. It offers a fresh, theological engagement with what literary critic Harold Bloom terms the American religion (transcendentalism: Emerson’s homespun mysticism). Specifically, it seeks to rehabilitate Emerson’s concept of self-reliance from the charge of gross egoism, by situating it in the context of normative mysticisms Eastern and Western. It undertakes a more
poetic
approach to reading theologically-inflected poetry, by exegeting four poets collectively constituting Bloom’s American religious “canon”: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Wallace Stevens, and Hart Crane. It utilizes a modified version of the ancient fourfold allegorical mode of reading Scripture, to draw out theological dimensions of four quintessential texts (
Nature
, “Song of Myself,” “Sunday Morning,” “Lachrymae Christi”), in order to offer a more imaginative way of reading imaginative writing. Building on Emerson’s contention, “just as there is creative writing, there is creative reading,” and Bloom’s claim, “a theory of poetry . . . must be poetry, before it can be of any use in interpreting poems,” it demonstrates the unique, viable ways in which poems are able to “do” theology—and perform or embody theopoetic truths.