Contact us on (02) 8445 2300
For all customer service and order enquiries

Woodslane Online Catalogues

9781602587809 Academic Inspection Copy

Redemption in Poetry and Philosophy

Wordsworth, Kant, and the Making of the Post-Christian Imagination
Description
Author
Biography
Table of
Contents
Reviews
Google
Preview
A biblical understanding of redemption requires the sacrificial death of Jesus. In the post-Christian world envisioned by Jean-Jacques Rousseau and his Enlightenment contemporaries, the Christ-centric source of redemption disappears, though the human need for salvation remains. Redemption in Poetry and Philosophy explores how this need for redemption is realized in the post-Christian poetics of William Wordsworth and philosophical imagination of Immanuel Kant. Simon Haines critiques the secular modes of salvation articulated by each figure to illustrate the shortcomings of modern, post-Christian imagination. Redemption in Poetry and Philosophy highlights the ways in which prose allegedly serves as a redemptive agent for nonbelievers in the modern age, but also engenders dangerous notions of self-redemption in contemporary Christians.
Simon Haines is Professor and Chair of English, The Chinese University of Hong Kong.
PrefaceAcknowledgments Introduction: The Making of the Post-Christian Imagination 1 Concepts, Metaphors, and Wordsworth 2 "Tintern Abbey"--Restoring the Soul 3 Spontaneity in Kant and Wordsworth 4 Wordsworth and Political Redemption I--Paradise 5 Wordsworth and Political Redemption II-- Paradise Lost Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
"Redemption in Poetry and Philosophy is highly original, lucid, tremendously thoughtful. Haines' knowledge of Western literature and philosophy is masterful. This work brings from the conceptual world of philosophy to the metaphorical world of poetry something I am confident that Romantic scholars will welcome and debate for years to come."--Richard Lansdown, Associate Professor of English, James Cook University
Google Preview content