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Chesterton and Tolkien as Theologians
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Description
While much writing on religious fantasy moves quickly to talk about wonder, Milbank shows that this has to be hard won and that Chesterton is more akin to the modernist writers of the early twentieth-century who felt quite dislocated from the past. His favoured tropes of paradox, defamiliarization and the grotesque have much in common with writers like T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound and James Joyce and their use of the demotic as well as the 'mythic method'.
Using Chesterton's literary rhetoric as a frame, the book sets out to chart a redemptive poetics that first decentres the reader from his habitual perception of the world, then dramatizes his self-alienation through the grotesque, before finding in that very alienation a sort of pharmakon through paradox and an embrace of difference. The next step is to change one's vision of the world beyond the self through magic which, paradoxically, is the means by which one can reconnect with the physical world and remove the fetishism and commodification of the object. Chesterton's theology of gift is the means in which this magic becomes real and people and things enter into reciprocal relations that reconnect them with the divine.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: Fairies, Fusiliers and Thomists
Part 1: Poetics
Chapter 1: Making Strange: The Fantastic
Chapter 2: The Grotesque
Chapter 3: Paradox and Riddles
Part 2: Praxis
Chapter 4: Fairy Economics: Gift-Exchange
Chapter 5: Fairy Poetics: Make Believe
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Product details
Published | 01 Jan 2009 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 202 |
ISBN | 9780567390417 |
Imprint | T&T Clark |
Dimensions | 216 x 138 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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"In this enjoyable book the imaginary worlds of Chesterton and Tolkien are explored in order to show their shared basis in a dynamic theology of creation and incarnation, an essential aspect in the revival of Christian imagination today." Benedicta Ward SLG, Reader in Christian Spirituality, Oxford University, UK
Benedicta Ward SLG, Reader in Christian Spirituality, Oxford University, UK
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"The fictional worlds of Chesterton and Tolkien are not only theological but also deeply Augustinian: they show us universes in which creatures exchange gifts with one another and with God. So argues Alison Milbank, with verve and brilliance, in this finely conceived and beautifully written book." Kevin Hart, The University of Virginia
Kevin Hart
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"I would like to think that Milbank's outstanding book, if it achieves nothing else, will make [fans] return to The Lord of the Rings with an enhanced appreciation for the depth, complexity and purpose of the world he created; and maybe, just maybe, entice some of them to the Chestertonian well from which it sprang." - Waterstone's Watford, www.waterstones.com
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"Milbank has gifted us with what may well become our finest study of these Catholic artists in their unique relation not only to each other but also to our imagination-starved churches and culture." First Things: The Journal of Religion, Culture and Public Life
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Mention -Theology Digest, Summer 2006
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'The achievement of this brilliant book is to show the truth of the Chestertonian paradox that is its subtile.' Theology, May 2009