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The relationship between the Bible and literature continues to
fascinate many scholars working in both fields. In this book, as
the Gospels and the work of four Scottish writers are read
together, their correspondences become manifest. The four writers,
James Hogg, Robert Louis Stevenson, Mrs Oliphant and Lewis Grassic
Gibbon, offer distinctive and accessible readings of the Gospels.
Bringing the biblical texts and the work of these writers into
conversation with one another highlights the changing ways the
Bible influenced the fiction of the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. Alison Jack shows that these novels function as exegeses
of Gospel texts and ideas. What is offered here is not a simple
noting of biblical allusions, but a narrative exploration of Gospel
themes, ideas and stories, such as the Parable of the Prodigal Son,
as they are woven through the content and form of the novels
discussed, among them Hogg's Confessions of a Justified Sinner and
Stevenson's The Master of Ballantrae. This weaving is never
untouched by the influence of Calvinism on the imagination of these
Scottish writers; but the influence, informed by the polymorphism
of gospel discourse, is often surprising and certainly not static.
This book offers an insight into a shifting literary world that
will be of interest to biblical critics working on the reception
history of the Gospels and to scholars of nineteenth- and
twentieth-century Scottish literature, as well as to general
readers who want to explore the hermeneutical issues raised by
reading the Bible and literature together.
The Parable of the Prodigal Son is one of the best-known stories in
the Bible. It has captured the imagination of commentators,
preachers and writers. Alison M. Jack explores the reconfiguring of
the character of the Prodigal Son and his family in literature in
English. She considers diverse literary periods and genres in which
the paradigm is particularly prevalent, such as Elizabethan
literature, the work of Shakespeare, the novels of female Victorian
writers, the American short story tradition, novels focused on the
lives of ordained ministers, and the poetry of Elizabeth Bishop and
Iain Crichton Smith. Drawing on scholarship from biblical and
literary studies, this study demonstrates the remarkable potency of
the parable in generating new, and at times contradictory, meanings
in different contexts. Historical and literary criticism are
brought into dialogue to explore this remarkably resilient and
nimble character as he dances through drama, novels and poetry
across the centuries.
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