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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Page 167
a single impression in any one reader : it is continually mobile and shifting in its effects , and so too should its forms be multiple . Thus there are two works of particularly dream - like structure , Phantastes ( 1858 ) and Lilith ...
a single impression in any one reader : it is continually mobile and shifting in its effects , and so too should its forms be multiple . Thus there are two works of particularly dream - like structure , Phantastes ( 1858 ) and Lilith ...
Page 210
By contrast Williams , Lewis and Tolkien give us structured universes in their fantasy , whether the ' diagram of glory that Williams continually celebrates , or the highly wrought cosmic plan in Lewis , in which ' all is pattern ' ...
By contrast Williams , Lewis and Tolkien give us structured universes in their fantasy , whether the ' diagram of glory that Williams continually celebrates , or the highly wrought cosmic plan in Lewis , in which ' all is pattern ' ...
Page 260
'35 By that means he continually displaces our appetite for the ' other ' towards a hunger for the Wholly Other . A sense of division seems to underlie much of Lewis's work . The Earth , ' a jungle of filth and imbecility ' , is cut off ...
'35 By that means he continually displaces our appetite for the ' other ' towards a hunger for the Wholly Other . A sense of division seems to underlie much of Lewis's work . The Earth , ' a jungle of filth and imbecility ' , is cut off ...
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The French Queste del Saint Graal | 12 |
The Commedia | 21 |
Copyright | |
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action acts allegory angels appears becomes beginning believe body called century certainly character Charles Christ Christian fantasy Church City comes concerned continually created creation Dante death described desire devil direct divine earth evil existence experience expresses fact Fairy faith fall Faustus feel fiction figure final further give given God's heaven Hell Holy human idea imagery imagination journey Land later less Lewis literature live London look lost MacDonald means mind move narrative nature never novel once Paradise pattern Pearl perhaps physical picture Pilgrim's play poem portrays present Progress reality Redcrosse relation seems seen sense significance soul spiritual story suggests supernatural Swedenborg tells things thought true truth turn understanding universe University Press vision Water-Babies whole writers