Chesterton and Tolkien as Theologians

Chesterton and Tolkien as Theologians

by Alison Milbank
Chesterton and Tolkien as Theologians

Chesterton and Tolkien as Theologians

by Alison Milbank

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

This book takes Chesterton's 'natural theology' through fairytales seriously as a theological project appropriate to an intellectual attempt to return to faith in a secular age. It argues that Tolkien's fiction makes sense also as the work of a Catholic writer steeped in Chestertonian ideas and sharing his literary-theological poetics. While much writing on religious fantasy moves quickly to talk about wonder, Milbank shows that this has to be hard won and that Chesterton is more akin to the modernist writers of the early twentieth-century who felt quite dislocated from the past. His favoured tropes of paradox, defamiliarization and the grotesque have much in common with writers like T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound and James Joyce and their use of the demotic as well as the 'mythic method'. Using Chesterton's literary rhetoric as a frame, the book sets out to chart a redemptive poetics that first decentres the reader from his habitual perception of the world, then dramatizes his self-alienation through the grotesque, before finding in that very alienation a sort of pharmakon through paradox and an embrace of difference. The next step is to change one's vision of the world beyond the self through magic which, paradoxically, is the means by which one can reconnect with the physical world and remove the fetishism and commodification of the object. Chesterton's theology of gift is the means in which this magic becomes real and people and things enter into reciprocal relations that reconnect them with the divine.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780567390417
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 03/01/2009
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 202
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Alison Milbank lectures in Literature and Theology at the University of Nottingham, UK. She was formerly John Rylands Research Institute Fellow at the University of Manchester, UK, and taught at the Universities of Cambridge, UK, Middlesex, UK, and Virginia, USA.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 
Preface 
Introduction: Fairies, Fusiliers and Thomists 
Part 1: Poetics 
Chapter 1: Making Strange: The Fantastic
Chapter 2: The Grotesque
Chapter 3: Paradox and Riddles
Part 2: Praxis
Chapter 4: Fairy Economics: Gift-Exchange
Chapter 5: Fairy Poetics: Make Believe
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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