Walker Percy's Search for Community

Walker Percy's Search for Community

by John F. Desmond
Walker Percy's Search for Community

Walker Percy's Search for Community

by John F. Desmond

Paperback

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Overview

In the first undertaking of its kind in Percy criticism, John F. Desmond traces—through Walker Percy's six published novels—the writer's central and enduring concerns with community. These concerns, Desmond argues, were grounded in the realism of such Scholastics as Aquinas and Duns Scotus—realism as updated by the semiotic theory of Charles Sanders Peirce, the American philosopher whose work Percy studied for more than forty years. Percy gleaned from Peirce the basic truth that humans are by nature relational beings, a truth reinforced by Percy's Catholic belief in mystical community.

Desmond shows how Percy's theosemiotic outlook shaped each of his novels, from The Moviegoer (1961) to The Thanatos Syndrome (1987), and provided a foundation for his analysis of alienation, his critique of scientism, and his vision of community. Percy's vision of community extended from the flawed social world of modern America and Western society to the mystical community beyond time and place prophesied in the Hebrew-Christian scriptures. This vision grew more explicit as Percy's novelistic career unfolded and was of a piece with the ideas developed in his many essays and in his "self-help" parable, Lost in the Cosmos (1983).

Percy saw himself as a witness to the collapse of scientific humanism in the face of consumerism, self-absorption, and violence. However, Desmond says, Percy also looked forward to a reconciliation of science, religion, and art. In one of his last public lectures, "The Fateful Rift: The San Andreas Fault in the Modern Mind," Percy called for a "new anthropology" based on a Peircean realism that accurately accounted for man's true nature as a wayfarer on a journey with others toward God. This call is echoed in the novels, in which, according to Desmond, Percy explores his vision of community "through representation of the shattered and deformed state of society and the searching of his protagonists, and through suggesting possibilities for healing their riven state."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820335827
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Publication date: 11/01/2010
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.80(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

JOHN F. DESMOND is Mary A. Denny Professor of English at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. He is the author of Risen Sons (Georgia) and At the Crossroads.

JOHN F. DESMOND is Mary A. Denny Professor of English at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. He is the author of Risen Sons (Georgia) and At the Crossroads.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations

Introduction
1. The Footprint on the Beach: The Moviegoer
2. Ground Zero and the Iron Horsehead: The Last Gentleman
3. The Thread in the Labyrinth: Love in the Ruins
4. The Worm of Interest: Lancelot
5. The Gift of the Word: The Second Coming
6. Community, History, and the Word: The Thanatos Syndrome
Epilogue

Notes
Works Consulted
Index

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