Description
Displacing the Divine is a splendid achievement. Douglas Alan Walrath has explored his territory with masterful thoroughness and presents his findings with a rare blend of clarity, patience, and vigor. He is entirely in control of fiction's subtle shifts between reflecting its times and making its times. He moves with unusual grace between works still widely known and those whose reputation has diminished over time. His readings are impressive for their tact and strong sense of the 'forgotten' work's continuing ability to tell us things we are glad to know. -- Henry Taylor, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry Displacing the Divine is a sweeping, impressively researched survey of religious fiction published in America between the 1790s and the 1920s, and Douglas Alan Walrath displays a masterful and comprehensive knowledge of religiously-inflected fiction. -- David S. Reynolds, author of Waking Giant: America in the Age of Jackson and Faith in Fiction: The Emergence of Religous Literature in America An impressive and nearly exhaustive work that chronicles the changing images of Protestant clergy in American literature. There is nothing else that approaches its comprehensiveness. -- Jackson W. Carroll, Duke Divinity School The beauty of this volume is that it shows the definition of the clergy role as changing with social, economic, and political times; and, to a somewhat lesser extent, how that role helps redefine religious and spiritual styles for people in general. -- Wade Clark Roof, University of California, Santa Barbara
About the Author
Douglas Alan Walrath is Lowry Professor Emeritus of Practical Theology at Bangor Seminary. He has served as pastor, church executive, seminary professor, and church strategy consultant in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. He lives in Maine.
Book Information
ISBN 9780231151061
Author Douglas Alan Walrath
Format Hardback
Page Count 400
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press