Available Formats
Textuality, Culture and Scripture: A Study in Interrelations
By (Author) Wesley A. Kort
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
15th November 2019
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
220.1
Hardback
138
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
A study of the relations between textuality, culture and scripture.
Textuality, Culture, and Scripture, a study of the necessary and close relations between the three concepts, describes the prominent role of texts and textuality in Western modernity and the exchange of textual for material understandings of culture that becomes apparent in the middle of the twentieth century. Taking its starting point in the turn or return in cultural studies to textuality, the argument addresses the necessary role of texts and textuality in cultural, group, and personal identities. Central to the argument is the thesis that "scripture," rather than an occasional or optional textual category, should be seen as playing a necessary role in an adequate textual theory.
Textuality, Culture, and Scripture integrates and extends Wesley Korts scholarly project of formulating a program in the literary study of religion that is at once resonant with and critical of late modernity. On display per usual are Korts special combination of theoretical sophistication and close textual reading, in the service here of what is his most impressive statement to date of the innate multivalence of the idea of the text and the consequent intersectionality of the sacred and the secular.
Richard A. Rosengarten, Associate Professor of Religion and Literature, University of Chicago Divinity School, USA
Wesley A. Kort taught in the Department of Religion at Princeton University before he joined the faculty of the Department of Religion and the Graduate Program of Religion at Duke University where he served until becoming professor emeritus of religion in 2014. He is the author of 11 books and many scholarly articles in books and journals that relate religious, literary, and cultural studies to one another.