by Alison Shell (Editor), Alison Shell (Author), Alison Shell (Author), Judith Maltby (Author), Judith Maltby (Editor), Alison Shell (Editor)
What do the women novelists Charlotte Bronte, Dorothy L. Sayers, Barbara Pym, Iris Murdoch and PD James all have in common? All of these writers shared a deep commitment to the Anglican church, and were both informed and influenced by the Christian message they found there. This edited collection of essays analyses the ways in which the Anglican church's teaching can be found in the creations of these writers, ranging from Charlotte M. Yonge's depiction of church authority, to Dorothy L. Sayers' advocacy of marital submission. Spanning writers from across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, these essays explore a range of writing styles, from autobiographical writing through social comedy, and the uncanny and supernatural. They lend insights into the way these diverse women writers share a level of coherence when examined together, and in so doing enable the reader to chart the long process of Anglicanism becoming a minority religion.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Publisher: T&T Clark
Published: 13 Jun 2019
ISBN 10: 0567686760
ISBN 13: 9780567686763
Book Overview: The Anglican Church has had a massive impact on a number of woman novelists. This illuminating study explores the range of ways and extent to which Anglicanism has inspired literary creations in the past centuries.