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Spiritual Identities

Literature and the Post-Secular Imagination

by Jo Carruthers (Volume editor) Andrew Tate (Volume editor)
©2010 Edited Collection XII, 236 Pages

Summary

This collection of essays considers the return of the religious in contemporary literary studies. In the twenty-first century it is now possible to detect a new sacred ‘turn’ in thought and writing. For some writers, this post-secular identity plays itself out in both a recuperation of religious traditions (Catholicism, Puritanism, Judaism) and a re-invention of the religious imaginary (apophaticism, messianism, apocalypticism, fundamentalism). In literary studies, the implications of the post-secular are revitalizing critical engagement with canonical works and fuelling the reclaiming of neglected writings as questions of the construction of spiritual identities come once again to the fore.

Details

Pages
XII, 236
Year
2010
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039119257
Language
English
Keywords
Post-secular Spiritual geography Apocalypticism Apophaticism
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2010. XII, 236 pp.

Biographical notes

Jo Carruthers (Volume editor) Andrew Tate (Volume editor)

The Editors: Jo Carruthers is RCUK Academic Fellow in Place and Space at the University of Bristol and works across the disciplines of literary and religious studies. She has published on the Book of Esther as well as the reception of the Bible in literary and nationalist contexts and is the author of Esther through the Centuries (2008). Andrew Tate is Senior Lecturer at Lancaster University. His two books, Douglas Coupland (2007) and Contemporary Fiction and Christianity (2008), reflect his interest in postmodern fiction, theory and spirituality.

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Title: Spiritual Identities