Saying and Showing: Art, Literature and Religious Understanding |
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Authors: | Patrick J. Sherry |
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Affiliation: | Religious Studies Department, Lancaster University, UK |
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Abstract: | I argue that works of art and literature can be primary expressions of religious ideas, i.e., ones not dependent on other modes of communication like preaching or theology. This does not mean, however, that such works are independent of criticism, for an artist or writer can show something that is untrue, immoral, crude, and so on. I maintain that art and literature may criticize theology, or vice versa; or, thirdly, the relationship between them may be reciprocal, and I illustrate these three possibilities via Ibsen's Brand, Goethe's Faust, and the film Dead Man Walking. |
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