Show simple item record

Insert Soul Here: The Witness of Sacramental Poetics as Apocalyptic for the People

dc.creatorDark, James David
dc.date.accessioned2020-08-22T00:10:41Z
dc.date.available2011-10-15
dc.date.issued2011-04-18
dc.identifier.urihttps://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/etd-03282011-155105
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1803/11609
dc.description.abstractThis study considers the category of religion, the phenomena ostensibly contained therein, and the cultural forces that often manage to evade or insulate themselves against critique by positioning themselves (or by being positioned) outside it. Like any organizing fiction, animating concern, or web of signification, religion itself is treated as a neutral social fact even as religion, as a category, is deployed as a critical tool to problematize unavowedly religious forms. I am here afforded a point of leverage by the term sacramental poetics which names the practice of religious creativity, those initiatives of conscience (whether in story, public action, image, or lyric) which posit an apocalyptic and therefore inescapably social witness within, against, and in spite of dominant forms of religiosity. James Joyce, Ursula Le Guin, Ralph Ellison, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Daniel Berrigan are examined as self-conscious practitioners of sacramental poetics, those for whom human interest questions of marketing strategies, natural resources, state-sponsored violence, and national borders are treated as unavoidably religious questions. As I understand them, these figures occupy and, to some extent, conjure a public commons where, as Derrida has it, literature functions as an institutionless institution, calling into question institutionalized forms, and religion will be understood as responsibility or nothing at all. Their witnessing work of interrogation is framed as the task of critical-prophetic consciousness which voices, again and again, the possibility of right religion which, like true worship, good government, or the hope of environmental sustainability, is alive and signaling in discourses deemed political, economic, and artistic. In this sense, I posit the witness of sacramental poetics as the primary, renewable resource of the ethical imagination.
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.subjectjames joyce
dc.subjectdaniel berrigan
dc.subjectapocalyptic
dc.subjectreligion
dc.subjectpoetics
dc.subjectscience fiction
dc.subjectliterature
dc.subjectderrida
dc.titleInsert Soul Here: The Witness of Sacramental Poetics as Apocalyptic for the People
dc.typedissertation
dc.contributor.committeeMemberM. Douglas Meeks
dc.contributor.committeeMemberHortense J. Spillers
dc.type.materialtext
thesis.degree.namePHD
thesis.degree.leveldissertation
thesis.degree.disciplineReligion
thesis.degree.grantorVanderbilt University
local.embargo.terms2011-10-15
local.embargo.lift2011-10-15
dc.contributor.committeeChairRichard McGregor
dc.contributor.committeeChairWilliam P. Franke


Files in this item

Icon

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record