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A Theology of Sense: John Updike, Embodiment, and Late Twentieth-Century American Literature

A Theology of Sense: John Updike, Embodiment, and Late Twentieth-Century American Literature

by Scott Dill
Title:
A Theology of Sense: John Updike, Embodiment, and Late Twentieth-Century American Literature
Author:
Scott Dill
Series (if any):
Literature, Religion, & Postsecular Stud
Format:
Paperback
Number of pages:
198 pages
Publisher:
Univ of Chicago behalf of Ohio State UP
ISBN-13:
9780814255001
EAN:
9780814255001
Classifications:
Literature: history and criticism
Weight (g):
696
Dimensions (mm):
155 x 229 x 14
Publication Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Condition:
New
Price:£31.14
1 copies in stock
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Description

Scott Dill's A Theology of Sense: John Updike, Embodiment, and Late Twentieth-Century American Literature brings together theology, aesthetics, and the body, arguing that Updike, a central figure in post-1945 American literature, deeply embeds in his work questions of the body and the senses with questions of theology. Dill offers new understandings not only of the work of Updike-which is importantly being revisited since the author's death in 2009-but also new understandings of the relationship between aesthetics, religion, and physical experience. Dill explores Updike's unique literary legacy in order to argue for a genuinely postsecular theory of aesthetic experience. Each chapter takes up one of the five senses and its relation to broader theoretical concerns: affect, subjectivity, ontology, ethics, and theology. While placing Updike's work in relation to other late twentieth-century American writers, Dill explains their notions of embodiment and uses them to render a new account of postsecular aesthetics. No other novelist has portrayed mere sense experience as carefully, as extensively, or as theologically-repeatedly turning to the doctrine of creation as his stylistic justification. Across this examination of his many stories, novels, poems, and essays, Dill proves that Updike forces us to reconsider the power of literature to revitalize sense experience as a theological question.

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