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The Catholic University of America Press is pleased to present the
second volume in our Catholic Women Writers series, which will
attempt to bring new attention to prose work of Catholic women
writers from the 19th and 20th centuries. Sheila Kaye-Smith was a
best selling author who had published over 50 books in her
lifetime, few of which remain in print since her death in 1956. The
End of the House of Alard (1922) documents the choices made by the
final generation of the aristocratic Alard family and the ways in
which they, both willingly and reluctantly, bring the long line of
their ancestral blood to a complete and sudden end. For some of
them, the end of the Alard line is as painful to enact as it is for
others to witness; for others it is welcomed as a necessary
modernization or a true realignment toward religious integity and
universal human truth. Some of the family's children yearn for
individual liberty; others have it forced upon them. But none of
them can find it under the burden of the Alard name and its
crumbling estate. The End of the House of Alard is a novel about
the human need for purpose, for a truth by which to live and for
which to die. It is a novel about faith and idolatry, love and
death, freedom and bondage, nature and grace. Put another way, it
is about how human beings cannot escape the great challenge of
salvation, of breaking free from false, man made gods in order to
unite instead with the divine love of Christ. The novel's
characters span a breadth of options on this spectrum and their
various outlooks on life continue to reflect those available to us
today.
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The Dry Wood (Paperback)
Caryll Houselander, Bonnie Lander Johnson, Julia Meszaros
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R848
R617
Discovery Miles 6 170
Save R231 (27%)
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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In the English-speaking world, the Catholic Literary Revival is
typically associated with the work of G. K. Chesterton/Hilaire
Belloc, Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene. But in fact the Revival's
most numerous members were women. While some of these women remain
well known?Muriel Spark, Antonia White, Flannery O'Connor, Dorothy
Day?many have been almost entirely forgotten. They include: Enid
Dinnis, Anna Hanson Dorsey, Alice Thomas Ellis, Eleanor Farjeon,
Rumer Godden, Caroline Gordon, Clotilde Graves, Caryll Houselander,
Sheila Kaye-Smith, Jane Lane, Marie Belloc Lowndes, Alice Meynell,
Kathleen Raine, Pearl Mary Teresa Richards, Edith Sitwell, Gladys
Bronwyn Stern, Josephine Ward, and Maisie Ward. There are various
reasons why each of these writers fell out of print: changes in the
commercial publishing world after World War II, changes within the
Church itself and in the English-speaking universities that
redefined the literary canon in the last decades of the 20th
century. Yet it remains puzzling that a body of writing so
creative, so attuned to its historical moment, and so unique in its
perspective on the human condition, should have fallen into
obscurity for so long. The Catholic Women Writers series brings
together the English-language prose works of Catholic women from
the 19th and 20th centuries; work that is of interest to a broad
range of readers. Each volume is printed with an accessible but
scholarly introduction by theologians and literary specialists. The
first volume in the series is Caryll Houselander's The Dry Wood.
Houselander is known primarily for her spiritual writings but she
also wrote one novel, set in a post-war London Docklands parish.
There a motley group of lost souls are mourning the death of their
saintly priest and hoping for the miraculous healing of a
vulnerable child whose gentleness in the face of suffering brings
conversion to them all in surprising and unexpected ways. The Dry
Wood offers a vital contribution to the modern literary canon and a
profound meditation on the purpose of human suffering.
Sacrifice has always been central to the study of religion yet
attempts to understand and assess the concept have usually been
controversial. The present book, which is the result of several
years of interdisciplinary collaboration, suggests that in many
ways the fascination with sacrifice has its roots in modernity
itself. Theological developments following the Reformation, the
rediscovery of Greek tragedies, and the encounter with the practice
of human sacrifice in the Americas triggered a complex and
passionate debate in the sixteenth century which has never since
abated. Contributors to this volume, leading experts from theology,
anthropology, and literary and cultural studies, describe and
discuss how this modern fascination for the topic of sacrifice has
evolved, how it has shaped theological debate, the literary
imagination, and anthropological theory. Individual chapters
discuss in depth major theological trajectories, theories of
sacrifice including those of Marcel Mauss and Rene Girard, and
current feminist criticism. They engage with sacrifice in the
context of religious and philosophical thought, works of literature
and film. They explore different yet overlapping aspects of
modernity's obsession with sacrifice. The book does not intend to
impose a single narrative over all these diverse contributions but
brings them into a conversation around a common centre.
Gathered here for the first time are the stories of Enid Dinnis,
who lived and wrote in London throughout the first half of the 20th
century. Few in London's literary scene knew that Dinnis was a nun
but she lived most of her life in a small convent in Wimbledon with
other well-known figures from the period, including Maud Petre.
Dinnis wrote Catholic stories for readers of all ages. She is one
of the finest lost authors of the Catholic Literary Revival.
Dinnis's intervention in the short story genre is considerable. She
weaves together fairy tale, myth, Catholic mysticism, epiphanic
dialogue and everyday characterization to produce stories that are
both simple and complex, both light-hearted and profound. Always
concerned with 'the wonderful resourcefulness of the love of God',
her stories proclaim the presence and workings of divine grace in
the everyday lives of all people—old and young, sceptics and
seekers, farmers and priests. Dinnis's stories show that God's love
is the answer to all human struggles and quests. They illustrate
what it means to receive love—human and divine—and to pass it
on. Her work is filled with visions and confessions, miracles and
conversions—but it is never overly pious or saccharine. Her
characters are real people experiencing the truths proclaimed by
the Catholic faith, which is always as marvelous as it is
every-day. Enid Dinnis's stories reenchant the post-enlightenment
world along Catholic lines. Her stories put the supernatural firmly
back into the world in a way more needed than ever.
The Catholic University of America Press is pleased to continue to
present new volumes in our Catholic Women Writers series, which
will shed new light on prose work of Catholic women writers from
the 19th and 20th centuries. Josephine Ward is one of Catholicism's
greatest literary treasures and a foremost contributor to English
literary history—except that she has all but completely fallen
from the historical record. She spent her life in close
companionship with the most active minds working in the late 19th
century to restore to the Catholic Church in England the
intellectual, sacramental and theological integrity it had once
enjoyed before three hundred years of persecution. All seven of her
novels are out of print, despite their once high acclaim in the fin
de siècle literary world. First published in 1899, One Poor
Scruple follows the recusant Riversdale family who have survived
the long penal years by observing a quiet aristocratic life of
sport and agriculture, never stepping into the public sphere from
which Catholics in Britain had been barred for so long. But at the
start of the twentieth century, a new generation has emerged. The
novel's younger characters are now legally able to go to Oxford and
Cambridge and to enter the public life of letters. Emboldened by
the confident work of John Henry Newman, this younger generation of
Catholics are nonetheless cautioned not to trust the Protestant
establishment. One Poor Scruple is a coming-of-age story in which
the new generation of more worldly Catholics search for love,
friendship and intellectual emancipation in the decadent social
world of Edwardian London. Decades before Evelyn Waugh examined in
Brideshead Revisitedthe human struggle to distinguish between true
and false beauty, Ward's novel examined the challenge of discerning
between conflicting desires and of living a life that is as
truthful and good as it is beautiful.
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