Testing the faith : the new Catholic fiction in America
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Testing the faith : the new Catholic fiction in America
(Contributions in American studies, no. 100)
Greenwood Press, 1992
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Since 1965 there has been an explosion of fiction about being Catholic, clearly a result of confusions in the post-Vatican II church. American Catholic culture has suffered severe dislocations, and fiction has provided one way of coping with those dislocations. In Testing the Faith, Anita Gandolfo provides an overview of fiction about the American Catholic experience.
The book considers emerging novelists such as Mary Gordon and Valerie Sayers and established writers like Paul Theroux. Among the popular writers covered are Andrew Greeley and William X. Keinzle. The volume also considers the emergence of new, young writers, such as Jeanne Schinto, Sheila O'Connor, and Philip Deaver. By analyzing patterns in contemporary Catholic fiction, Gandolfo shows both the shared interest these writers have in the Catholic experience and their individual perspectives on that experience. The book is the first to consider post-Vatican II Catholic literature, and will be of interest to those concerned with both the Catholic experience and current literature.
Table of Contents
Preface Faith and Imagination Visions of Experience Visions of Passionate Intensity Visions of Innocence Restored? Visions of Reconciliation Alternative Visions Visions of Individualism Prophetic Vision: The Spiritual Quest Prophetic Vision: As We Are Now Conclusion: Vision of a Changing Church Bibliography Index
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