Poetic Relations: Intimacy and Faith in the English Reformation

Poetic Relations: Intimacy and Faith in the English Reformation

by Constance Furey (Author)

Synopsis

What is the relationship between our isolated and our social selves, between aloneness and interconnection? Constance M. Furey probes this question through a suggestive literary tradition: early Protestant poems in which a single speaker describes a solitary search for God. As Furey demonstrates, John Donne, George Herbert, Anne Bradstreet, and others describe inner lives that are surprisingly crowded, teeming with human as well as divine companions. The same early modern writers who bequeathed to us the modern distinction between self and society reveal here a different way of thinking about selfhood altogether. For them, she argues, the self is neither alone nor universally connected, but is forever interactive and dynamically constituted by specific relationships. By means of an analysis equally attentive to theological ideas, social conventions, and poetic form, Furey reveals how poets who understand introspection as a relational act, and poetry itself as a form ideally suited to crafting a relational self, offer us new ways of thinking about selfhood today and a resource for reimagining both secular and religious ways of being in the world.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 02 Jul 2017

ISBN 10: 022643415X
ISBN 13: 9780226434155

Media Reviews
Poetic Relations benefits from Furey's wide learning in the fields of literary and religious studies. Using a variety of human relationships--from friendship to love to marriage--as models, Furey investigates the nature of the ties between the speaking I of the lyric poem and the reader. She argues that poems should be understood as essentially relational encounters rather than private utterances. This 'relational poetics' encourages an important ethical reimagining of poetry and of selfhood, proposing that we understand both lyric texts and people as fundamentally dependent on connection. --Kimberly Johnson, author of Made Flesh: Sacrament and Poetics in Post-Reformation England
Constance M. Furey's Poetic Relations: Intimacy and Faith in the English Reformation brings the author's expertise as a religious studies scholar and wide-ranging familiarity with literary scholarship in early modern religious poetry. . .guided by the astute perception that 'form is the medium of relationality, ' [it] may attract interest for its conceptual rigor. --Recent Studies in the English Renaissance
Author Bio
Constance M. Furey is associate professor of religious studies at Indiana University. She is the author of Erasmus, Contarini, and the Religious Republic of Letters.