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Tackling the contentious subject of Dickens and religion, this book sets his religious quest within the context of nineteenth-century debates about providential meaning, and draws on the providential thinking of Bakhtin and Ricoeur.

Produktbeschreibung
Tackling the contentious subject of Dickens and religion, this book sets his religious quest within the context of nineteenth-century debates about providential meaning, and draws on the providential thinking of Bakhtin and Ricoeur.


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Autorenporträt
Jennifer Gribble is a graduate of the Universities of Melbourne and Oxford and is Honorary Associate Professor of English at the University of Sydney, where she has taught for most of her academic career. She has published widely on Victorian and Australian Literature. Her previous publications include The Lady of Shalott in the Victorian Novel (1983), Christina Stead (1994), and the 1998 Penguin edition of George Eliot's Scenes of Clerical Life.

Rezensionen
"Comprehensive, lucid, brilliant, illuminating, and readable, Dickens and the Bible: What Providence Meant explains how the Judeo-Christian grand narrative extending from Eden to the Fall and finally to salvation--the providential plot--structures Dickens's stories. Jennifer Gribble places his work, appropriately, in the midst of the religious wars that racked Britain in the nineteenth century. She also demonstrates the ways in which the conflicts between theories of divine order, natural selection, and human choice resound in the theories of our time, and discovers how they are richly and complexly embedded in Dickens's writings and artistic credo."

Robert L. Patten, Lynette S. Autrey Professor Emeritus in Humanities, and Emeritus Professor of English, Rice University

"How might we understand the theological references that permeate the work of Charles Dickens? It's a challenging question, and one that has proved difficult for generations of critics. With this in mind, I am immensely grateful for Jennifer Gribble's wonderful new book. Bringing together an attentive reading of Dickens with a rare level of theological sensitivity and understanding, Gribble helps us to register the complexity of religion in the work of this influential Victorian author and see why the theological references matter."

Mark Knight, Professor in Literature, Religion, and Victorian Studies, Lancaster University.