Christian Fantasy: From 1200 to the PresentThis is the first account of invented stories of the Christian supernatural, of fantasies that depict imagined forms of heaven or hell, angel or devil, world and creator; it considers their growth and changes from the time of Dante to the present day. Relatively infrequent, such works nevertheless for centuries represented some of the highest aspirations of art. Works considered here include the French Queste del Saint Graal, Dante's Commedia, the Middle English Pearl, the first book of Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Marlowe's Dr. Faustus, Milton's Paradise Lost, Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress, Swedenborg's Heaven and Hell and poems by Blake; and, from the post-Romantic and increasingly less 'Christian' period, the fantasies of George MacDonald, Charles Kingsley, Charles Williams, C. S. Lewis and many others. In the development of these works, a primary issue is found to be the fantasy-making imagination itself, at first seen as a potential obstacle to plain Christian purpose, but more recently given freer rein in the new aim of demonstrating God's existence in a more secular world. The picture that emerges is of a literary mode which becomes more fictive and indirect in its presentation of Christian vision. |
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Página 107
contrast to Dante , pictures not a graded but a flat and continental hell , in which
the fire and ice seem as much geographical as spiritual : there is a burning lake
and barren land , which suggests a volcanic region , and the portrayal of the ...
contrast to Dante , pictures not a graded but a flat and continental hell , in which
the fire and ice seem as much geographical as spiritual : there is a burning lake
and barren land , which suggests a volcanic region , and the portrayal of the ...
Página 186
Thus , where MacDonald takes his characters into fairy lands quite different from
their ' everyday worlds , Kingsley keeps ... to the land called the Other - end - of -
Nowhere , do we enter the wholly fantastical ; but then it is as fantastical as that ...
Thus , where MacDonald takes his characters into fairy lands quite different from
their ' everyday worlds , Kingsley keeps ... to the land called the Other - end - of -
Nowhere , do we enter the wholly fantastical ; but then it is as fantastical as that ...
Página 259
It thrust itself up so that the land on either side sloped downwards from it ; and
then up farther still and shouldered half the landscape out of sight beyond its
ridge ; and became a huge greeny - gold hog ' s back of water hanging in the sky
and ...
It thrust itself up so that the land on either side sloped downwards from it ; and
then up farther still and shouldered half the landscape out of sight beyond its
ridge ; and became a huge greeny - gold hog ' s back of water hanging in the sky
and ...
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Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
The French Queste del Saint Graal | 12 |
The Commedia | 21 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 17 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
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