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Food Restraint and Fasting in Victorian Religion and Literature
Food Restraint and Fasting in Victorian Religion and Literature
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Description
Through an interdisciplinary lens of theology, medicine, and literary criticism, this book examines the complicated intersections of food consumption, political economy, and religious conviction in nineteenth-century Britain.
Scholarship on fasting is gendered. This book deliberately faces this gendering by looking at the way in which four Victorian women writers - Christina Rossetti, Alice Meynell, Elizabeth Gaskell and Josephine Butler - each engage with food restraint from ethical, social and theological perspectives. While many studies look at fasting as a form of spiritual discipline or punishment, or alternatively as anorexia nervosa, this book positions limiting food consumption as an ethical choice in response to the food insecurity of others. By examining their works in this way, this study repositions feminine religious practice and writing in relation to food consumption within broader contexts of ecocriticism, economics and social justice.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Elizabeth Gaskell, Ethical Economics and Ethical Eating
Chapter 2: Christina Rossetti, Spiritual Growth and Social Justice
Chapter 3: Josephine Butler's Hagiography as Social Prophecy
Chapter 4: Alice Meynell's Complex Relationship to the Health of the Body
Conclusion: One Body
Bibliography
Product details

Published | 27 Jan 2022 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 168 |
ISBN | 9781350256521 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Series | New Directions in Religion and Literature |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Insightful and comprehensive ... [Scholl's] work presents a fascinating and sagacious study of how four popular Victorian women writers, Elizabeth Gaskell, Christina Rossetti, Josephine Butler, and Alice Meynell incorporated their personal responses to the religious and social discourses around food restraint and fasting into their writings.
Southeast Asian Review of English
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[Scholl] has essentially hit the mark in her fresh, succinct, and ultimately compelling work.
Victorian Studies

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