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In a Vision of the Night - Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos (Hardcover)
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In a Vision of the Night - Job, Cormac McCarthy, and the Challenge of Chaos (Hardcover)
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How is life possible in a world of evil, suffering, and chaos?
Christians have historically been inept at offering adequate
answers as to why people's lives are derailed by sudden chaos and,
even worse, at equipping people to live in the throes, or
aftermath, of that same chaos. Underlying this confusion is an
assumption that evil is a formidable chink in the armor of God's
creation. The book of Job challenges such thinking, but its meaning
often remains hidden because of a long-standing belief in Christian
hermeneutics that the book is about why bad things happen to good
people, or about why suffering happens. This is not the case. With
In a Vision of the Night Philip Thomas offers a fresh perspective
into the book of Job by reading it alongside the fiction of Cormac
McCarthy. While some critics have previously identified Joban
overtones in McCarthy's work, Thomas argues for something far
stronger: a recurrent Joban resonance throughout McCarthy's works.
McCarthy's rejection of philosophical theodicy, his
anti-anthropocentric vision of the world, his assumed presence of
chaotic figures, and the quietly persistent note of hope that runs
throughout his books reveal the Joban influence. Thomas contends
that knowledge of the book of Job gives insight into McCarthy's
literary output; conversely, reading Job through a McCarthyite lens
enables proper apprehension of the scriptural text. Through a
thematically based theological reading of McCarthy and Job, In a
Vision of the Night draws out often overlooked aspects of the book
of Job. Further, it reveals that McCarthy, like the Joban author,
constructs a theodicy that both rejects the easy stance of a
detached and generalized answer to the question of why chaos comes
and advances the more pressing question of how life continues in
the face of chaos.
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