Master Kierkegaard: The Complete Journals
English


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About The Book

In this serial work of religious historical fiction Magda a fallen woman from Berlin turned maidservant in the house of Soren Kierkegaard seeks the full life that has thus far eluded her. Two journals set in the summer of 1847 record Magdas responses to the Luther Bible Goethes Faust and her elusive yet compelling master who is simultaneously crafting his Works of Love. Three journals set in the fall winter and peoples spring of 1847 and 1848 reflect Magdas ongoing engagement with secular and sacred writings her sporadic yet intimate interactions with her master the precariousness of her position in his household and the rapidly changing social landscape at the same time as Kierkegaard begins revises or completes several of his most existential and prophetic works. A sixth journal set in the summer of 1848 reveals Magdas final disposition. Is she judged or is she saved? Through the changing of the seasons in a year of revolutions a maidservant reflects on the Bible . . . and the anguish and hope of her master the Danish philosopher Soren Kierkegaard. Ellen Brown has crafted an understated heartfelt and moving meditation on the enigmatic man religion the position of women in society and a life of exile and liberation. --Marshall Brown Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Washington editor of Modern Language Quarterly and author of The Shape of German Romanticism Readers of Magdas diary from the summer of 1847 will be delighted with these journals which continue her life story alongside her continuing reflections on Scripture literature and life. Like the first volume this collection is filled with spiritual insight and wisdom. The life story takes a surprising turn or was it to be expected? Magdas characterization of Kierkegaard is poetic and convincing. --Adela Yarbro Collins Buckingham Professor of New Testament Criticism and Interpretation at Yale Divinity School Ellen Brown lives in Connecticut. Her publications prior to Master Kierkegaard include essays on Percy Shelleys Prometheus Unbound and Mary Shelleys Frankenstein.
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