*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹1911
₹2248
14% OFF
Paperback
All inclusive*
Qty:
1
About The Book
Description
Author
An enjoyment of the poets art as seen in the words of T. S. Eliot Robert Frost and Wallace Stevens. As a Protestant theologian writes McGill in his preface I have always been puzzled that within the Christian community poetry is often used for its insight into our modern miseries but that it is rarely enjoyed as poetry. This book seeks to redress the balance. McGill focuses on three American poets--Eliot Frost and Stevens--all of whom belong to the same poetic generation and thus provide a microcosm of poetry from this era. Influenced by Owen Barfield John Crowe Ransom and Cleanth Brooks he identifies poetry with the fleshly aspect of experience yet never as distinct from a spiritual aspect. In the kingdom of God people are created with flesh reconciled through flesh and glorified as flesh. To hide from the flesh for the sake of the spirit is to miss the Christian life. It is this danger which gives special meaning to the enjoyment of poetry. This experience of poetry according to McGill is always a healthy antidote to spiritual pride. In The Celebration of Flesh Arthur McGill contends that only in reading poetry as poetry--and he makes artful provocative observations about what this means and what poetry is--can poetry yield true fruitfulness for the life of faith. David Cain University of Mary Washington Arthur C. McGill (1926 -1980) was the Bussey Professor of Theology at Harvard Divinity School. A distinguished philosopher and theologian he also taught at Amherst College Wesleyan University and Princeton University.