Available Formats
The Divine Face in Four Writers: Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, Hesse, and C. S. Lewis
By (Author) Dr. Maurice Hunt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
17th December 2015
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
809.93382
Hardback
192
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
431g
An important contribution to studies in literature and religion, The Divine Face in Four Writers traces the influence of Christian and Classical prototypes in ideas and depictions of the divine face, and the centrality of facial expressions in characterization, in the works of William Shakespeare, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Hermann Hesse, and C.S. Lewis. Maurice Hunt explores both the human yearning to see the divine face from post-Apostolic time to the 20th century, as reflected in religion, myth, and literature by writers such as Augustine, Shakespeare, Hardy and Dostoyevsky, as well as the significance of the hidden divine face in writings by Spenser, Milton, Hesse, and Lewis. A final coda briefly detailing Emmanuel Levinass system of ethics, based on the human face and its encounters with other faces, allows Hunt to focus on specific moments in the writings of the four major writers discussed that have particular ethical value.
Maurice Hunt demonstrates that a great many diverse works of a religious and secular nature have represented face-to-face encounters between human beings and gods or between human beings and their fellow human beings in order to convey religious or ethical ideas. I came away from this book with a new recognition of an important motif in Western religious and cultural history. I also came away with a deeper understanding of the psychology of religious belief. It is an impressive achievement. * James Hirsh, Professor of English, Georgia State University, USA *
Maurice Hunt is Research Professor of English at Baylor University, USA. He is the author of ten books, including Shakespeares Romance of the Word (1990), Shakespeares Labored Art: Stir, Work, and the Late Plays (1995), Shakespeares Religious Allusiveness (2004), and Shakespeares Speculative Art (2011).