'Kubla Khan' and the Fall of Jerusalem: The Mythological School in Biblical Criticism and Secular Literature 1770-1880Cambridge University Press, 1980 M06 5 - 361 pages Dr Schaffer outlines the development of the mythological school of European Biblical criticism, especially its German origins and its reception in England, and studies the influence of this movement in the work of specific writers: Coleridge Hölderlin, Browning, and George Eliot. The 'higher criticism' treated sacred scripture as literature and as history, as the product of its time, and the highest expression of a developing group consciousness; it challenged current views on the authorship and dating of the Pentateuch and the Gospels, on inspiration, prophecy, and canonicity, and formulated a new apologetics closely linked with the growth of Romantic aesthetics. The importance of this study is that it shows that readings of specific literary texts can intersect with general movements of thought and action through the scrutiny of a clearly defined intellectual discipline, here the higher criticism, which developed as a particular expression of the larger trends in the history of the period. Dr Shaffer throws light on individual works of literature, the formation between England and Germany, and the bases of European Romanticism. |
From inside the book
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Page 1
... ideas and equally little of the very specific local history of its reception and practice in England . They place their emphasis largely on the late , that is , the mid - nineteenth - century history of the movement without any ...
... ideas and equally little of the very specific local history of its reception and practice in England . They place their emphasis largely on the late , that is , the mid - nineteenth - century history of the movement without any ...
Page 2
... ideas ; it might even be termed ' literary sociology ' in so far as it recognizes the need to consider the entire milieu of a work of art , in its intimate relations with artistic creation , and not simply to offer superficial and ...
... ideas ; it might even be termed ' literary sociology ' in so far as it recognizes the need to consider the entire milieu of a work of art , in its intimate relations with artistic creation , and not simply to offer superficial and ...
Page 3
... ideas , Goldmann warns us further that ' none of the traditional fields of university study ( law , political history , experimental psycho- logy , sociology , etc. ) is concerned with a sufficiently autonomous subject'.4 Goldmann's ...
... ideas , Goldmann warns us further that ' none of the traditional fields of university study ( law , political history , experimental psycho- logy , sociology , etc. ) is concerned with a sufficiently autonomous subject'.4 Goldmann's ...
Page 4
... movement . Given that the history of ideas is inseparable from the history of poetry , what ' relative whole ' shall we disengage ? In one sense , I have deliberately chosen the hardest case : ' Kubla Khan ' 4 Introduction.
... movement . Given that the history of ideas is inseparable from the history of poetry , what ' relative whole ' shall we disengage ? In one sense , I have deliberately chosen the hardest case : ' Kubla Khan ' 4 Introduction.
Page 14
... ideas out of which emerged a distinctive Christian world view . ' Orientalism ' was one aspect of this broad Hellenism . This is the context of Coleridge's interest in neo - platonism and his syncretic style , the means to the ...
... ideas out of which emerged a distinctive Christian world view . ' Orientalism ' was one aspect of this broad Hellenism . This is the context of Coleridge's interest in neo - platonism and his syncretic style , the means to the ...
Contents
The Fall of Jerusalem Coleridges unwritten epic | 17 |
The visionary character Revelation and the lyrical ballad | 62 |
The oriental idyll | 96 |
Holderlins Patmos ode and Kubla Khan mythological doubling | 145 |
Brownings St John the casuistry of the higher criticism | 191 |
Daniel Deronda and the conventions of fiction | 225 |
Eichhorns outline of the poetic action of the Book of Revelation | 292 |
A translation of Holderlins Patmos | 296 |
Patmos | 303 |
Notes | 309 |
346 | |
357 | |
Other editions - View all
'Kubla Khan' and the Fall of Jerusalem: The Mythological School in Biblical ... E. S. Shaffer No preview available - 1975 |
Common terms and phrases
Adam allegory apocalyptic apologetics apostles attempt Beddoes Bible Biblical criticism Biblical poetry Book of Revelation Browning Browning's character Christ Christian claim Coleridge Coleridge's conception consciousness context culture Daniel Deronda death disciples divine doctrine early Eichhorn eighteenth century Einleitung English Enlightenment epic event experience fact faith Fall of Jerusalem Feuerbach Fourth Gospel Gabler Genesis George Eliot German gnostic gods Greek Gwendolen Hebrew Hegel Hellenistic Herder higher criticism Hölderlin holy human Ibid idea imagination interpretation Jesus Jesus's Jewish Jews John John's Kant Klopstock Kubla Khan Letters literary literature London milieu miracle modern monotheism moral Mysteries myth mythological nature Notebooks novel Old Testament Oriental original Patmos philosophical poem poet poetic poetry primitive prophecy prophetic religion religious Renan romantic sacred scene Schelling sense soul spirit Strauss symbolic syncretism theology theory thought tradition trans translation Unitarian Victorian vision visionary Werke whole wrote