A Theology Of Reading: The Hermeneutics Of LoveIf the whole of the Christian life is to be governed by the “law of love”—the twofold love of God and one's neighbor—what might it mean to read lovingly? That is the question that drives this unique book. Jacobs pursues this challenging task by alternating largely theoretical, theological chapters—drawing above all on Augustine and Mikhail Bakhtin—with interludes that investigate particular readers (some real, some fictional) in the act of reading. Among the authors considered are Shakespeare, Cervantes, Nabakov, Nicholson Baker, George Eliot, W.H. Auden, and Dickens. The theoretical framework is elaborated in the main chapters, while various counterfeits of or substitutes for genuinely charitable interpretation are considered in the interludes, which progressively close in on that rare creature, the loving reader. Through this doubled method of investigation, Jacobs tries to show how difficult it is to read charitably—even should one wish to, which, of course, few of us do. And precisely because the prospect of reading in such a manner is so offputting, one of the covert goals of the book is to make it seem both more plausible and more attractive. |
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Page 26
... believe your loving me could shut up your heart ; it's only adding to what you've been before , not taking away from it ; for it seems to me it's the same with love and happiness as with sorrow - the more we know of it the better we can ...
... believe your loving me could shut up your heart ; it's only adding to what you've been before , not taking away from it ; for it seems to me it's the same with love and happiness as with sorrow - the more we know of it the better we can ...
Page 75
... believe ) once said , there is no such thing as an unmixed mo- tive . There is health in Baker's admiration of Updike , especially in this admission , one that comes after a period in his life when he was eager to have his girlfriend ...
... believe ) once said , there is no such thing as an unmixed mo- tive . There is health in Baker's admiration of Updike , especially in this admission , one that comes after a period in his life when he was eager to have his girlfriend ...
Page 117
... believe , testifies to my claim that Tompkins is a charitable reader . What is most noteworthy about it is that she does not stack the deck by imbalancing her clauses ; she does not encourage us to love Buffalo Bill by diminishing or ...
... believe , testifies to my claim that Tompkins is a charitable reader . What is most noteworthy about it is that she does not stack the deck by imbalancing her clauses ; she does not encourage us to love Buffalo Bill by diminishing or ...
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achieve Adam Bede agape Alasdair MacIntyre Alcibiades argument Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's attention Auden Augustine Augustine's Augustinian Baker Bakhtin Buffalo Bill C. S. Lewis calls Cartesian Chapter character charitable reading charity Christ Christian circus claim Claudio and Don context course criticism cultural Derrida Dickens Dickens's Dickinson Dinah Dinah Morris discernment discourse distinction Don Pedro essay ethical eudaimonia friendship Gadamer genuine George Eliot gift Gradgrind hermeneutics hermeneutics of love Hero human I-for-myself interpretation Iris Murdoch Jacques Derrida Jesus justice kenosis Kierkegaard Kinbote kind knowledge language literary live magnanimous means Milbank moral narrator neighbor Nietzsche Nietzsche's notion Nussbaum one's oneself pagan Pale Fire passage perhaps person philia pleasure poem political precisely question Quixotic quoted reader Rich Scripture sense Shade simply Sleary Sleary's spirit theology things thought tion Tompkins tradition truth understanding Updike Vereker virtue W. H. Auden words writes Zarathustra