ABSTRACT

This innovative book aims to create a ‘poetics of Church’ and a ‘religious imaginary’ as alternatives to more institutional and conventional ways of thinking and of being ‘Church’. Structured as a spiritual and literary journey, the work moves from models of the institutional Catholic Church into more radical and ambiguous textual spaces, which the author creates by bringing together an unorthodox group of thinkers referred to as ‘poet-companions’: the 16th-century founder of the Society of Jesus, Ignatius of Loyola, the French thinkers Gaston Bachelard and Hélène Cixous, the French poet Yves Bonnefoy, and the English playwright Dennis Potter.

Inspired especially by the reading and writing practices of Cixous, the author attempts to exemplify Cixous’ notion of écriture féminine—‘feminine writing’—that suggests new ways of seeing and relating. The project’s uniting of Ignatian spirituality with postmodern thinking and its concern with creating new theological, literary and spiritual spaces for women both coincide and contrast with Pope Francis’s pastoral and reformist tendencies, which have neglected to adequately address the marginalisation of women in the Church. As Francis has called for ‘a theology of women’, of which there are, of course, many to draw from, this volume will be a timely contribution with a unique interdisciplinary approach.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction(s)

part I|63 pages

Home

chapter 1|16 pages

Skirting the edges

Tina Beattie and Hans Urs von Balthasar in church

chapter 2|21 pages

Gaston Bachelard takes us to church

chapter 3|23 pages

Transfigurations with Yves Bonnefoy

part II|54 pages

Leaving home

chapter 4|13 pages

What is church when church is not?

chapter 5|13 pages

The poet sets the path

A reading of Hélène Cixous’ Manna

chapter 7|12 pages

Poetry and prayer

An ‘inner kinship’

part III|42 pages

Transformative homecomings

chapter 8|22 pages

‘But now my eye sees you’

Reading Dennis Potter’s The Singing Detective and the Book of Job with Hélène Cixous

chapter 9|18 pages

Believing as a poet

‘Writing all the way down’