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The conversation, sometimes heated, about the influence of
Christianity on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien has a long history.
What has been lacking is a forum for a civilized discussion about
the topic, as well as a chronological overview of the major
arguments and themes that have engaged scholars about the impact of
Christianity on Tolkien's oeuvre, with particular reference to The
Lord of the Rings. The Ring and the Cross addresses these two needs
through an articulate and authoritative analyses of Tolkien's Roman
Catholicism and the role it plays in understanding his writings.
The volume's contributors deftly explain the kinds of
interpretations put forward and evidence marshaled when arguing for
or against religious influence. The Ring and the Cross invites
readers to draw their own conclusions about a subject that has
fascinated Tolkien enthusiasts since the publication of his
masterpiece, The Lord of the Rings.
Africa: What It Gave Me, What It Took from Me is a memoir of an
extraordinary woman who, as a newlywed, travelled with her husband
to German South West Africa, a colony situated just above South
African on the Atlantic coast. Here they begin a farm in a quite
remote area where they raise cattle, sheep, and goats and plant
large gardens on the banks of the Omaruru River. They build a
comfortable home and welcome their first child. As the von
Eckenbrechers work hard to build, their farm natives, whose land
has been appropriated by the colonial government, are planning a
revolt against colonial rule. Insurrection begins and the von
Eckenbrechers are in the midst of it all. As the rebellion
strengthens, Frau von Eckenbrecher returns to Germany to wait out
the insurrection. Her husband eventually returns as well. Frau von
Eckenbrecher never feels completely at home again in Germany. The
von Eckenbrechers divorce and Frau von Eckenbrecher returns to
South West Africa with her two sons. Her former husband emigrates
to Paraguay. Frau von Eckenbrecher eventually takes a position in a
German language school in Windhoek, the capital city, and rears her
two sons there. In her book she chronicles colonial life, the
natives of the colony, how the Spanish Influenza pandemic raged in
Namibia, World War I in Africa, German surrender, and the South
African occupation of German South West Africa and the eventual
ceding of the colony to South Africa. We bring the memoir to a
close with an update of Frau von Eckenbrecher's later life and
death, and a short remembrance from one of her two grandsons.
This volume attempts to throw fresh light on two areas of Benjamin
Franklin's intellectual world, namely: his self-fashioning and his
political thought. It is an odd thing that for all of Franklin's
voluminous writings-a fantastically well-documented correspondence
over many years, scientific treatises that made his name amongst
the brightest minds of Europe, newspaper articles, satires, and of
course his signature on the Declaration of Independence and the
U.S. Constitution-and yet scholars debate how to get at his
political thought, indeed, if he had any political philosophy at
all. It could be argued, that he is perhaps the American Founder
most closely associated with the Enlightenment. Similarly, for a
man who left so much evidence about his life as a printer,
bookseller, postmaster, inventor, diplomat, politician, scientist,
among other professions, one who wrote an autobiography that has
become a piece of American national literature and, indeed, a
contribution to world culture, the question of who Ben Franklin
continues to engage scholars and those who read about his life. His
identity seems so stable that we associate it with certain virtues
that apply to the way we live our lives, time management, for
example. The image of the stable figure of Franklin is applied to
create a sense of trust in everything from financial institutions
to plumbers. His constant drive to improve and fashion himself
reveal, however, a man whose identity was not static and fixed, but
was focused on growth, on bettering his understanding of himself
and the world he lived in and attempted to influence and improve.
This volume attempts to throw fresh light on two areas of Benjamin
Franklin s intellectual world, namely: his self-fashioning and his
political thought. It is an odd thing that for all of Franklin s
voluminous writings a fantastically well-documented correspondence
over many years, scientific treatises that made his name amongst
the brightest minds of Europe, newspaper articles, satires, and of
course his signature on the Declaration of Independence and the
U.S. Constitution and yet scholars debate how to get at his
political thought, indeed, if he had any political philosophy at
all. It could be argued, that he is perhaps the American Founder
most closely associated with the Enlightenment. Similarly, for a
man who left so much evidence about his life as a printer,
bookseller, postmaster, inventor, diplomat, politician, scientist,
among other professions, one who wrote an autobiography that has
become a piece of American national literature and, indeed, a
contribution to world culture, the question of who Ben Franklin
continues to engage scholars and those who read about his life. His
identity seems so stable that we associate it with certain virtues
that apply to the way we live our lives, time management, for
example. The image of the stable figure of Franklin is applied to
create a sense of trust in everything from financial institutions
to plumbers. His constant drive to improve and fashion himself
reveal, however, a man whose identity was not static and fixed, but
was focused on growth, on bettering his understanding of himself
and the world he lived in and attempted to influence and improve."
Friedrich Schiller (1759-1805) absorbed the fertile ideas of the
German Enlightenment, observed first-hand fresh developments in
German Romanticism, and fostered one of Europe's last great
Classical movements. His insights into the human condition have
endured and are as valuable now as they were when he first wrote.
His characterisations of human nature remain compelling and his
stylistic achievements in language continue to be admired and
studied. His writing spanned many genres - poetry, prose, drama,
history, philosophy - and includes a rich correspondence with
Goethe. In this volume, an interdisciplinary and international
group of scholars examines the many sides that Schiller displays.
The contributors illuminate key facets of his ideas by organising
his writing around his various vocations: his medical training;
work as a poet, young dramatist, and author of literary prose; his
tenure as a university professor and historian; the mutually
productive partnership with Goethe; his philosophical writings; and
his final years as a mature playwright. His afterlife, what
Schiller has meant to Germans for two centuries, is also
considered.
That Thomas Carlyle was influential in his own lifetime and
continues to be so over 130 years after his death is a proposition
with which few will disagree. His role as his generation's foremost
interpreter of German thought, his distinctive rhetorical style,
his approach to history via the "innumerable biographies" of great
men, and his almost unparalleled record of correspondence with
contemporaries both great and small, makes him a necessary figure
of study in multiple fields. Thomas Carlyle and the Idea of
Influence positions Carlyle as an ideal representative figure
through which to study that complex interplay between past and
present most commonly referred to as influence. Approached from a
theoretically ecumenical perspective by the volume's introduction
and eighteen essays, influence is itself refigured through a number
of complementary metaphorical frames: influence as organic
inheritance; influence as aesthetic infection; influence as
palimpsest; influence as mythology; influence as network; and more.
Individual essays connect Carlyle with the persons and publications
of Mathilde Blind, Orestes Brownson, John Bunyan, G. K. Chesterton,
Benjamin Disraeli, George Eliot, T. S. Eliot, Ralph Waldo Emerson,
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, James Joyce, William Keenan, Windham
Lewis, Jules Michelet, John Stuart Mill, Robert Owen, Spencer
Stanhope, John Sterling, and others. Considered as a whole, Thomas
Carlyle and the Idea of Influence assembles a web of conceptual and
intertextual connections that both challenges received
understandings of influence itself and establishes a standard by
which to measure future assertions of Carlyle's enduring
intellectual legacy in the twenty-first century and beyond.
The conversation, sometimes heated, about the influence of
Christianity on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien has a long history.
What has been lacking is a forum for a civilized discussion about
the topic, as well as a chronological overview of the major
arguments and themes that have engaged scholars about the impact of
Christianity on Tolkien's oeuvre, with particular reference to The
Lord of the Rings. The Ring and the Cross addresses these two needs
through an articulate and authoritative analyses of Tolkien's Roman
Catholicism and the role it plays in understanding his writings.
The volume's contributors deftly explain the kinds of
interpretations put forward and evidence marshaled when arguing for
or against religious influence. The Ring and the Cross invites
readers to draw their own conclusions about a subject that has
fascinated Tolkien enthusiasts since the publication of his
masterpiece, The Lord of the Rings.
The Enlightenment, an eighteenth-century philosophical and cultural
movement that swept through Western Europe, has often been
characterized as a mostly secular phenomenon that ultimately
undermined religious authority and belief, and eventually gave way
to the secularization of Western society and to modernity. To
whatever extent the Enlightenment can be credited with giving birth
to modern Western culture, historians in more recent years have
aptly demonstrated that the Enlightenment hardly singled the death
knell of religion. Not only did religion continue to occupy a
central pace in political, social, and private life throughout the
eighteenth century, but it shaped the Enlightenment project itself
in significant and meaningful ways. The thinkers and philosophers
normally associated with the Enlightenment, to be sure, challenged
state-sponsored church authority and what they perceived as
superstitious forms of belief and practice, but they did not mount
a campaign to undermine religion generally. A more productive
approach to understanding religion in the age of Enlightenment,
then, is to examine the ways the Enlightenment informed religious
belief and practice during the period as well as the ways religion
influenced the Enlightenment and to do so from a range of
disciplinary perspectives, which is the goal of this collection.
The chapters document the intersections of religious and
Enlightenment ideas in such areas as theology, the natural
sciences, politics, the law, art, philosophy, and literature.
Shows Goethe, the most famous of German writers, as a child of the
Enlightenment. Throughout his oeuvre Goethe invokes the writers and
thinkers of the Enlightenment: Voltaire and Goldsmith, Sterne and
Bayle, Beccaria and Franklin. And he does not merely reference
them: their ideas make up the salt of his most acclaimed works.
Like Hume before him, Goethe takes up the topic of suicide, but in
a best-selling novel, Werther; the beating heart of Faust I is the
fate of a woman who commits infanticide, a burning social issue
ofhis age; in an article for a popular journal Goethe takes up the
cause of Kant and Penn, who wrote treatises on how to establish
peace in Europe. In another essay Goethe calls for reconciliation
between Germans who had fought against each other in those same
Wars, as well as for worldwide understanding between Christians,
Jews, Muslims, and Heathens. Professor Kerry shows that Goethe is a
child of the Enlightenment and an innovator of its legacy. To do
sohe discusses a chronological swath of Goethe's works, both
popular and neglected, and shows how each of them engages
Enlightenment concerns. Paul Kerry is Professor of History at
Brigham Young University.
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