Oxford
Handbook Of English Literature And Theology
Edited by Andrew Hass, David Jasper and Elisabeth Jay
Oxford University Press, 2007, £85.00, Hardback, 889p., ISBN
978-0199271979
I cannot really offer a review of this book as I am neither a specialist
literary scholar nor a theologian and, in any case, the publishers
did not respond to my request for a review copy. However, I have
examined the contents of a reference library copy, and I offer this
brief notice for the information of visitors to the website.
The book is described as “a definitive survey of one of
the most popular and productive interdisciplinary fields – that
of theology and literature”. Contributors are drawn from both
sides of the Atlantic and include specialists in both literature
and theology.
Part One includes introductory essays on what it might mean to engage
in the interdisciplinary study of English literature and theology
with David Jasper, Professor of Literature and Theology at the University
of Glasgow, pointing out the recent emphasis on “Story” in
theological studies.
Part Two looks at the formation of the tradition and includes articles
on Vernacular Bibles and Prayer Books, the Protestant and Catholic
Reformations, the Enlightenment, Romanticism, German criticism, the
Victorians, Modernism and Post-Modernism.
Part Three considers literary ways of reading the Bible with articles
on various parts of the Bible – for example, the Pentateuch,
Judges, Psalms, the Prophetic Literature, the Synoptic Gospels, the
Gospel of John, and Apocalyptic Literature.
Part Four examines theological ways of reading literature, and offers
essays on Langland and Chaucer, Shakespeare and Marlowe, Herbert
and Donne, Milton, the 18th Century novel, Blake, Wordsworth and
Coleridge, T.S. Eliot, David Jones and W.H. Auden.
Part Five is concerned with Theology as Literature and considers
Cranmer and the Collects, Bunyan, John Henry Newman, and C.S. Lewis.
Part Six looks at the “Great Themes” in literature -
Evil and the God of Love, Death and the After-life, the Passion Story
in literature, Visions of Heaven and Hell, Feminism and Patriarchy,
and Salvation.
The book closes with Part Seven – an afterword on the future
of English literature and theology.
If you would like to find this book in your Christmas stocking,
you will probably have to persuade your friends and relatives to
club together and buy it for you. However, I would certainly commend
this publication to anyone interested in the links between religion
and literature – and I would hope to find a copy in any large
reference library.
Contributed by:
Graham Hedges, Hon. FCLIP, MCLIP, who is Secretary of the Librarians'
Christian Fellowship and works for the public library service in
the London Borough of Wandsworth.