This essay will explore the ways in which a literary author’s explicit encoding of belief impacts narrative interest. Borrowing analytical tools from the fields of narrative theory and pragmatic theology, this essay will analyze recorded book club discussions of Louise Erdrich’s novel Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse(2001). In particular, it will focus on the ways participants negotiated three themes they deemed contentious and ethically problematic in the novel: the descriptions of gender as performative and porous, saintliness or hagiography, and the promotion of hybrid religious practices. This content analysis of participants’ negotiations of the novel’s themes will help elucidate some of the ways in which literary discuss...
Marilynne Robinson's Pulitzer prize-winning novel Gilead is preoccupied with religious epistemology....
In this entry, we survey key discussions on the role of narrative in theology and philosophy of reli...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Michael Scott, and Finlay Malcolm, ‘Reli...
For much of the twentieth century, conventional wisdom held that as societies modernized, they would...
Religion and literature do not play identical roles in society, but they both rely heavily on imagin...
To think of the human life as a walking, talking, living and breathing poem radically changes the wa...
This article links the significance of the process of crafting and receiving stories to a greater un...
Fictions of Belief tells the story of evangelical identity by telling the story of five, bestselling...
In this dissertation, I argue that spiritual representations by characters, authored by Marilynne Ro...
In his 2012 New York Times article “Has Fiction Lost Its Faith?,” Paul Elie notes how Christian beli...
MA (English), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014This dissertation focuses on the retu...
This thesis investigates some of the connections between the two disciplines of Theology and Literat...
69 leaves. Advisor: Dr. Stuart BurnsThe problem. In contemporary American fiction it was noted that...
Rethinking religion and literature in a series of chapters by leading international scholars, Readin...
Popular culture is a powerful, shaping force in the lives of teenagers between the ages of fourteen...
Marilynne Robinson's Pulitzer prize-winning novel Gilead is preoccupied with religious epistemology....
In this entry, we survey key discussions on the role of narrative in theology and philosophy of reli...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Michael Scott, and Finlay Malcolm, ‘Reli...
For much of the twentieth century, conventional wisdom held that as societies modernized, they would...
Religion and literature do not play identical roles in society, but they both rely heavily on imagin...
To think of the human life as a walking, talking, living and breathing poem radically changes the wa...
This article links the significance of the process of crafting and receiving stories to a greater un...
Fictions of Belief tells the story of evangelical identity by telling the story of five, bestselling...
In this dissertation, I argue that spiritual representations by characters, authored by Marilynne Ro...
In his 2012 New York Times article “Has Fiction Lost Its Faith?,” Paul Elie notes how Christian beli...
MA (English), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014This dissertation focuses on the retu...
This thesis investigates some of the connections between the two disciplines of Theology and Literat...
69 leaves. Advisor: Dr. Stuart BurnsThe problem. In contemporary American fiction it was noted that...
Rethinking religion and literature in a series of chapters by leading international scholars, Readin...
Popular culture is a powerful, shaping force in the lives of teenagers between the ages of fourteen...
Marilynne Robinson's Pulitzer prize-winning novel Gilead is preoccupied with religious epistemology....
In this entry, we survey key discussions on the role of narrative in theology and philosophy of reli...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Michael Scott, and Finlay Malcolm, ‘Reli...