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POETRY AGAINST EVIL: A BULGAKOVIAN THEOLOGY OF POETRY1
Authors:RYAN McDERMOTT
Institution:Ryan McDermott
The University of Virginia, Department of English Language and Literature, 219 Bryan Hall, P. O. Box 400121, Charlottesville, VA 22904‐4121 USA
mcdermott@virginia.edu
Abstract:The essay introduces Sergei Bulgakov's theology of creation and evil in order to develop a theology of language, conceiving language as the path along which humans receive their own givenness, but also participate in the creation of the world. Poetry's attention to the difficulty of language, its acceptance of artificial disciplines, and its nonrational mode of knowledge uniquely attune it to language's creative—and destructive—potential. Like a monastery for language, poetry enacts a linguistic askesis, schooling its language and its readers in conversion. The essay includes a close reading of Gjertrud Schnackenberg's poem, “Supernatural Love.” A conclusion situates the essay's program for a theology of literature in relation to Henri de Lubac's work on spiritual exegesis and Hans Urs von Balthasar's use of literature in his theology.
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