A Theology of Criticism: Balthasar, Postmodernism, and the Catholic Imagination
Michael P. Murphy
Abstract
The turn of the millennium has brought with it a vigorous revival in the interdisciplinary study of theology and art. The notion of a Catholic imagination, however, as a specific category of aesthetics, lacks thematic and theological coherence. More often, the idea of a Catholic imagination functions at this time as a deeply felt intuition about the organic connections that exist among theological insights, cultural background, and literary expression. The book explores the many ways that the theological work of Hans Urs von Balthasar (1905–1988) provides the model, content, and optic for demo ... More
The turn of the millennium has brought with it a vigorous revival in the interdisciplinary study of theology and art. The notion of a Catholic imagination, however, as a specific category of aesthetics, lacks thematic and theological coherence. More often, the idea of a Catholic imagination functions at this time as a deeply felt intuition about the organic connections that exist among theological insights, cultural background, and literary expression. The book explores the many ways that the theological work of Hans Urs von Balthasar (1905–1988) provides the model, content, and optic for demonstrating the credibility and range of a Catholic imagination. Since Balthasar views arts and literatures precisely as theologies, the book surveys a broad array of poetry, drama, fiction, and film and sets these readings against the central aspects of Balthasar's theological program. A major consequence of this study is the recovery of the legitimate place of a distinct “theological imagination” in the critical study of literary and narrative art. The book also argues that Balthasar's voice both complements and challenges contemporary critical theory and contends that postmodern interpretive methodology, with its careful critique of entrenched philosophical assumptions and reiterated codes of meaning, is not the threat to theological meaning that many fear. On the contrary, postmodernism can provide both literary critics and theologians alike with the tools that assess, challenge, and celebrate the theological imagination as it is depicted in literary art today.
Keywords:
Catholic imagination,
Hans Urs von Balthasar,
analogical imagination,
Incarnation,
literary criticism,
critical theory,
Trinity,
trinitarian,
personhood,
postmodernism,
sacramental,
Flannery O'Connor,
Lars von Trier,
David Lodge,
Walker Percy,
William Everson,
Denise Levertov,
William Lynch,
René Girard,
David Tracy,
Jacques Derrida,
Judith Butler,
theological aesthetics,
Theodrama,
Theo‐logic,
love
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2008 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780195333527 |
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2008 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195333527.001.0001 |