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About The Book
Description
Author
George MacDonald (1824-1905) was writing at a time of Evangelical unease. In a society ravaged by Asiatic cholera numbed by levels of infant mortality and fearful of revolution and the toxicity of industry (to name but a few of the many challenges) the gospel proclaiming eternal damnation for unbelievers was hardly good news; rather Christianity was increasingly viewed as the source of bad news and a tool of state oppression. MacDonald agreed: in his view the church had become a vampire sucking the blood of her children instead of offering them eucharistic life.In contrast like Christ MacDonald brings before us a child. Although at first sight a familiar Romantic incarnation in MacDonalds theology the child becomes an unlikely icon challenging the vampires kingdom--a challenge reaching beyond the confines of Evangelicalism confronting the foundations of much of Western theology.This meticulously-researched study exploring MacDonalds work--especially his realist and fantasy novels--in the light of its Victorian context is of more than historical interest. His incisive critique of church and empire have particular relevance today in light of the growing and troubling alliance between fundamentalist expressions of church and intolerant right-wing politics. This volume considers MacDonalds radical solution to religious vampirism; becoming children.