ABSTRACT

In this book Grace Jantzen constructs a Quaker spirituality of beauty as a theological-philosophical response to a world preoccupied with death and violence. Having mapped the foundations of western cultural violence in the Greco-Roman period and the Judea-Christian tradition in Foundations of Violence and Violence to Eternity, she now offers her alternative vision. This vision is an original and creative feminist reading of the Quaker tradition, considering George Fox and the writings of Quaker women, exploring the themes of inner light and beauty as alternatives to violence and the obstacles to building such an alternative world. After showing how seventeenth-century Quakers offered a different option for modernity, she maps the philosophical and ethical implications of engaging with the world through beauty and its transforming power. Written for everyone interested in contemporary spirtuality, it explains how Quaker ideas can provide a way to transform our violent world into one that celebrates life rather than death, peace rather than violence.

This work is the second of two posthumous publications to complete Grace M. Jantzen’s Death and the Displacement of Beauty collection, which began with Foundations of Violence (Routledge, 2004).

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part One The anxieties of beauty

chapter 2|17 pages

Beauty denied

part |2 pages

Part Two Beauty, Quakers and the inner Light

chapter 3|5 pages

Beauty and spirituality

chapter 4|13 pages

Quakers and the inner Light

chapter 5|18 pages

Choose life! Early Quaker women

chapter 7|19 pages

Before the rooster crows

part |2 pages

Part Three Beauty, desire and engaged spirituality

chapter 8|11 pages

In the eye of the beholder?

chapter 9|22 pages

Beauty and the body

chapter 10|16 pages

Beauty, desire and need

chapter 12|13 pages

On changing the imaginary