Constructing nineteenth-century religion : : literary, historical, and religious studies in dialogue / / edited by Joshua King and Winter Jade Werner.
Examines the ways in which religion was constructed as a category and region of experience in nineteenth-century literature and culture.
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Superior document: | Literature, religion, and postsecular studies |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Columbus : : The Ohio State University Press,, [2019] ©2019 |
Year of Publication: | 2019 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Literature, religion, and postsecular studies.
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (286 pages). |
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Table of Contents:
- Religion and the secular state: Loisy's use of 'religion' prior to his excommunication / Jeffrey L. Morrow
- A commonwealth of affection: modern Hinduism and the cultural history of the study of religion / J. Barton Scott
- "God's insurrection: politics and faith in the revolutionary sermons of Joseph Rayner Stephens" / Mike Sanders
- George Jacob Holyoake, secularism, and constructing 'religion' as an anachronistic repressor / David Nash
- Karl Marx and the invention of the secular / Dominic Erdozain
- From treasures to trash, or, the real history of 'family Bibles' / Mary Wilson Carpenter
- Rereading Queen Victoria's religion / Michael Ledger-Lomas
- Jewish women's writing as a new category of affect / Richa Dwor
- Hybridous monsters: constructing 'religion' and 'the novel' in the early nineteenth century / Miriam Elizabeth Burstein
- Material religion: C.H. Spurgeon and the 'battle of the styles' in Victorian church architecture / Dominic Janes
- Wilde's uses of religion / Mark Knight
- Reading Psalms in nineteenth-century England: the contact zone of Jewish/Christian scriptural relations / Cynthia Scheinberg
- Postsecular English studies and romantic cults of authorship / Charles LaPorte
- Theologies of inspiration: William Blake and Gerard Manley Hopkins / Michael D. Hurley
- William Blake, the secularization of religious categories, and the history of imagination / Peter Otto.