Possession: Theme

A.S. Byatt’s Possession uses resurrection as a recurring theme. Words contain life. Through language, particularly art, the dead can live again. In their epistolary romance, Randolph Ash and Christabel LaMotte argue about Jesus Christ’s divinity. I don’t think Byatt thinks it is a crucial conversation for the novel, merely a resonant example of the book’sContinue reading “Possession: Theme”

Covenantal Shakespeare – The Comedies

If I pursue a short course on Shakespeare’s comedies, I would emphasize three things. The covenant The arc from “wrath to grace” How the comedy redeems the idol that ruins its companion tragedy I know what my pairs would be for HIERARCHY through SUCCESSION. TRAGEDY                                        COMEDY Romeo and Juliet                           Midsummer Night’s Dream Hamlet                                            The Merchant ofContinue reading “Covenantal Shakespeare – The Comedies”

A Covenantal Outline for Oblivion: Stories

David Foster Wallace’s Oblivion: Stories includes eight tales about life in the late 20th and early 21st century. The book’s theme is that the information onslaught of life in the 1990s and 2000s causes us to forget (the root meaning of “oblivion”) not only what is most important but also what is most obvious. WallaceContinue reading “A Covenantal Outline for Oblivion: Stories”

10 Books to Review

Over the next two months, I plan to review the following ten books. Through New Eyes by James Jordan An Experiment in Criticism by CS Lewis Sound and Sense by Laurence Perrine Anatomy of Criticism by Northrop Frye Literary Approaches to Biblical Interpretation by Tremper Longman III Christianity and Literature: Philosophical Foundations and Critical PracticeContinue reading “10 Books to Review”

Faithful Thanksgiving

Today, I presented a paper at SWU’s Faith Integration in the Academy Conference titled, “Faithful Thanksgiving: Gratitude Practices as Faith Integration.” It’s long and personal. Here it is. Good morning. We’re going to start with the practice that my workshop investigates. If this were my classroom, I would say something like, “It’s 9 am; pleaseContinue reading “Faithful Thanksgiving”

Tennyson’s Psalm

Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s “In Memoriam A.H.H.” captures the grief of losing a friend. More profoundly, it articulates the more significant doubts such grief occasions. The poem contains many oft-quoted phrases that you probably didn’t know came from this poem. It was Tennyson who called Nature “red in tooth and claw,” and it was Tennyson whoContinue reading “Tennyson’s Psalm”

Barriers to Entry

Literary criticism takes time. I don’t find the time itself difficult. Instead, I struggle with the best way to spend that time. Herman Rapaport’s The Literary Theory Toolkit gave me an answer. In the book’s preface, Rapaport lists a literary critic’s necessary skills: Knowledge of an author’s life and times Competence in the author’s spoken/writtenContinue reading “Barriers to Entry”

Christian Literary Criticism: Intrinsic and Extrinsic

Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest you be like him yourself. Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own eyes. Proverbs 26:4-5 When I read, I look for the author’s intention. Authorial intention has its opponents, but I think it must inform our initial responses. It’s partContinue reading “Christian Literary Criticism: Intrinsic and Extrinsic”

Conclusions: Part II

My Covenantal Shakespeare course could be subtitled “Idols for Destruction.” As I’ve hinted at elsewhere, the tragic form moves from grace to wrath. As a set, the five plays I’ve examined consider the wrathful destruction of five different idols. Julius Caesar – the idol of politics Romeo and Juliet – the idol of romantic loveContinue reading “Conclusions: Part II”