Partial Faiths: Postsecular Fiction in the Age of Pynchon and Morrison by John A. McClure
Author:John A. McClure
Format: pdf
Tags: Spiritual conversions figure heavily in such novels as Thomas Pynchon’s Vineland, Toni Morrison’s Paradise, and Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine. What connects such varied works is that their convert-characters are disenchanted with secularism yet apprehensive of dogmatic religiosity. Partial Faiths is the first study to identify a body of contemporary fiction in such terms, take the measure of its structures and strategies, and evaluate its contribution to public discourse on religion’s place in postmodern life. Postsecularism is most often associated with philosophers and theorists such as Jacques Derrida, Richard Rorty, Charles Taylor, William Connolly, Jürgen Habermas, and Gianni Vattimo. But it is also being explored and invented, says John A. McClure, by many novelists: Leslie Marmon Silko, Don DeLillo, Michael Ondaatje, and N. Scott Momaday among others. These novelists, who are often regarded as belonging to different domains of contemporary fiction, are fleshing out the postsecular issues that scholars treat more abstractly. But the modes of belief elaborated in these novels and the new narrative forms synchronized with these modes are dramatically partial and open-ended. Postsecular fiction does not aspire to any full “mapping” of the reenchanted cosmos or any formal moral code, nor does it promise anything like full redemption. It is partial in another sense as well: it is emphatically dedicated to progressive ideals of social transformation and well-being, in repudiation of resurgent fundamentalist prescriptions for the same., Publisher:University of Georgia Press, Published:2007, Related ISBN:9780820330327, Language:English, OCLC:608820269
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell & Bill Moyers(925)
Half Moon Bay by Jonathan Kellerman & Jesse Kellerman(911)
A Social History of the Media by Peter Burke & Peter Burke(879)
Inseparable by Emma Donoghue(844)
The Nets of Modernism: Henry James, Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and Sigmund Freud by Maud Ellmann(738)
The Spike by Mark Humphries;(719)
A Theory of Narrative Drawing by Simon Grennan(706)
The Complete Correspondence 1928-1940 by Theodor W. Adorno & Walter Benjamin(703)
Ideology by Eagleton Terry;(659)
Bodies from the Library 3 by Tony Medawar(648)
Culture by Terry Eagleton(646)
World Philology by(645)
Farnsworth's Classical English Rhetoric by Ward Farnsworth(641)
A Reader’s Companion to J. D. Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye by Peter Beidler(614)
Adam Smith by Jonathan Conlin(607)
Game of Thrones and Philosophy by William Irwin(592)
High Albania by M. Edith Durham(591)
Comic Genius: Portraits of Funny People by(581)
Monkey King by Wu Cheng'en(575)
