ABSTRACT

What is the role of spiritual experience in poetry? What are the marks of a religious imagination? How close can the secular and the religious be brought together? How do poetic imagination and religious beliefs interact? Exploring such questions through the concept of the religious imagination, this book integrates interdisciplinary research in the area of poetry on the one hand, and theology, philosophy and Christian spirituality on the other. Established theologians, philosophers, literary critics and creative writers explain, by way of contemporary and historical examples, the primary role of the religious imagination in the writing as well as in the reading of poetry.

part |44 pages

Theology and Literature in Context

chapter |20 pages

Why Theologians Are Interested in Literature

Theological-Literary Hermeneutics in the Works of Guardini, Balthasar, Tillich and Kuschel

part |98 pages

The Religious Imagination: From Thomas Aquinas to Wallace Stevens

part |58 pages

Inspiration: Poetry and Poetry Reading

chapter |16 pages

The Poet as ‘Worldmaker'

T.S. Eliot and the Religious Imagination

chapter |12 pages

Non tantum lecturi sed facturi

Reading Poetry as Spiritual Transformation

part |30 pages

Poets and Spiritual Experience: Mystical Gestures

chapter |12 pages

‘There Is a Verge of the Mind'

Imagination and Mystical Gesture in Rilke's Later Poems

chapter |16 pages

‘The Pulse in the Wound'

Embodiment and Grace in Denise Levertov's Religious Poetry

part |20 pages

Poetry, Religious Imagination and Religious Belief

chapter |18 pages

Images of the Virgin in the Late Sixteenth Century

The Catholic Devotional Poetry of Henry Constable