Available Formats
Religion and American Literature Since 1950
By (Author) Professor Mark Eaton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
21st October 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
810.90054
Paperback
288
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
336g
From Flannery OConnor and James Baldwin to the post-9/11 writings of Don DeLillo, imaginative writers have often been the most insightful chroniclers of the USAs changing religious life since the end of World War II. Exploring a wide range of writers from Protestant, Catholic, Jewish and secular faiths, this book is an in-depth study of contemporary fictions engagement with religious belief, identity and practice. Through readings of major writers of our time like Saul Bellow, E. L. Doctorow, Philip Roth, Marilynne Robinson and John Updike, Mark Eaton discovers a more nuanced picture of the varieties of American religious experience: that they are more commonplace than cultural ideas of progressive secularisation or faith-based polarization might suggest.
[Eaton shows] the depth and power of literary analysis when it takes the religious into serious consideration. * Cercles Book Review *
Eatons book challenges longstanding narratives about secularization by showing how uneven and often unpredictable spiritual experience is today...This is a bracing and encouraging work of cutting edge literary analysis of the continuing relevance and mystery of the spiritual and religious in our everyday livesa must read for everyone doing work in these fields. * Harold K. Bush, Professor of English, Saint Louis University, USA *
Mark Eaton is Professor of English at Azusa Pacific University, USA.