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Church without the church : desert orthodoxy in Flannery O'Connor's "dear old dirty Southland" / M. K. Shaddix.

LIBRA PS3565.C57 Z858 2015
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Shaddix, M. K.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
O'Connor, Flannery--Criticism and interpretation.
O'Connor, Flannery.
O'Connor, Flannery--Religion.
Catholic Church--In literature.
Catholic Church.
American literature--Southern States--History and criticism.
American literature.
Christianity and literature.
Religion.
Criticism and interpretation.
Southern States.
Christianity and literature--Southern States.
Physical Description:
xvi, 297 pages ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
Macon, Georgia : Mercer University Press, 2015.
Summary:
In the Fifty years since her Death, Flannery O'Connor studies have been conventionally delimited to two critical parameters: the South and the Church of Rome. This work challenges the conception of O'Connor as inherent to a monolithic South and to orthodox Roman Catholicism by problematizing the "Southern Gothic" trope, positing a non-canonical Southern realism, and repositioning O'Connor as essentially ecumenical in her private theology. The study contextualizes O'Connor's work within the American scene by detailing the varied political and literary histories of the "North" and "South" as well as opposing the notion of region-specific aesthetics and a native anti-realist mode in the South. The text also contests the body of scholarship that attempts to explain O'Connor's work in terms of Roman orthodoxy. Shaddix gives evidence to the contrary that the author, though a practicing Roman, was attentive to and sympathetic of the interlinking traditions in Judaism and Christianity as well as the prophetic mysticism of the Desert Fathers and Southern Evangelicals. Furthermore the study demonstrates the interconnectedness of O'Connor's continually evolving spiritual and critical thinking with her process of story writing and personal correspondence. The result of Shaddix's work is an insightful and penetrating analysis and reading of O'Connor and her Christ-Haunted South. Book jacket.
Contents:
Monsters, monoliths, and Middle Georgia: Flannery O'Connor and the "Dear Old Dirty Southland"
"One Jesus [is] just as bad as another": Orthodoxy as ecumenical blasphemy in the fiction of Flannery O'Connor
"Just as it is or nothing": Flannery O'Connor's ugly Jesus
"Lest ye be born again": heretical baptism in "The River" and The Violent Bear it Away
"Imagin[ing] a vain thing": the undeniable body in "The Enduring Chill," "The Comforts of Home," and "Why do the Heathen Rage?"
Second coming: Flannery O'Connor in the post-south and Europe.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 269-287) and index.
ISBN:
9780881465280
0881465283
OCLC:
908639899

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