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Made Flesh: Sacrament and Poetics in Post-Reformation England

by Kimberly Johnson
Made Flesh: Sacrament and Poetics in Post-Reformation England

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ISBN13: 9780812245882
ISBN10: 0812245881
Condition: Standard
DustJacket: Standard

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Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

During the Reformation, the mystery of the Eucharist was the subject of contentious debate and a nexus of concerns over how the material might embody the sublime and how the absent might be made present. For Kimberly Johnson, the question of how exactly Christ can be present in bread and wine is fundamentally an issue of representation, and one that bears directly upon the mechanics of poetry. In Made Flesh, she explores the sacramental conjunction of text with materiality and word with flesh through the peculiar poetic strategies of the seventeenth-century English lyric.

Made Flesh examines the ways in which the works of John Donne, George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, Edward Taylor, and other devotional poets explicitly engaged in issues of signification, sacrament, worship, and the ontological value of the material world. Johnson reads the turn toward interpretively obstructive and difficult forms in the seventeenth-century English lyric as a strategy to accomplish what the Eucharist itself cannot: the transubstantiation of absence into perceptual presence by emphasizing the material artifact of the poem. At its core, Johnson demonstrates, the Reformation debate about the Eucharist was an issue of semiotics, a reimagining of the relationship between language and materiality. The self-asserting flourishes of technique that developed in response to sixteenth-century sacramental controversy have far-reaching effects, persisting from the post-Reformation period into literary postmodernity.

Review

The author distinguishes her work from others that identify asstudies of "eucharistic poetics," "sacramental poetics," and "the poetics of immanence." She explains in her introduction that moststudies focus on what the poems convey about Renaissance sacramental theology, while the present work is concerned with the how ratherthan the what. She discusses textual immanence in The Temple, Edward Taylor's "Menstruous Cloth," metaphor and resistance in John Donne,Richard Crashaw, and immanent textualities in a a postsacramental world.Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Synopsis

Made Flesh explores the ways in which the works of John Donne, George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, Edward Taylor, and other devotional poets negotiated the strange triangulation of body, word, and meaning in the Eucharist, effectively reproducing the interpretative challenges of sacramental worship.


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Product Details

ISBN:
9780812245882
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication date:
02/05/2014
Publisher:
University of Pennsylvania Press
Language:
English
Pages:
237
Height:
.88IN
Width:
6.36IN
Thickness:
.75
LCCN:
2013042034
UPC Code:
9780812245882
Author:
Kimberly Johnson
Subject:
Anthologies-United Kingdom Poetry
Subject:
Lord's Supper in literature.
Subject:
Symbolism in literature
Subject:
Christianity and literature
Subject:
Early modern, 1500-1700

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