Literature & Sacrament: The Sacred and the Secular in John DonneDuquesne University Press, 1999 - 338 pages In this innovative study, Theresa DiPasquale examines John Donne's theological and ideological responses to the Reformation debate over the sacraments, and how this debate greatly influenced his view of the written word as visible sign and of the poet as the quasi-divine maker of that sign, and of the reader as its receiver. This study, then, attempts to reconstruct Donne's own, quite nuanced theology of sacrament to provide a guide to his poetics, and, in particular, to his conception of the exchange between author and reader." |
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Page 8
... Protestant figure of the primacy of reading or survaying and the Catholic figure of eating or digesting ' the whole body of Divinity " " ( Hester , " this cannot be said , " " 369 ) . Donne thus equivocates , Hester argues , rendering ...
... Protestant figure of the primacy of reading or survaying and the Catholic figure of eating or digesting ' the whole body of Divinity " " ( Hester , " this cannot be said , " " 369 ) . Donne thus equivocates , Hester argues , rendering ...
Page 60
... Protestant , " the religious poets of sev- enteenth century England " are not , in their poetry , so much militant proponents of the Reformation as Christians con- fronting God . " These poets , including Donne , " draw upon a number of ...
... Protestant , " the religious poets of sev- enteenth century England " are not , in their poetry , so much militant proponents of the Reformation as Christians con- fronting God . " These poets , including Donne , " draw upon a number of ...
Page 296
... Protestant Petrarchism " ( " this cannot be said , ' " 382 ) . Hester reads Donne's love poetry as " a witty critique of the poetry , the poetics , and the Protestant po- lemic best represented by Sidney's works , as a sort of witty ...
... Protestant Petrarchism " ( " this cannot be said , ' " 382 ) . Hester reads Donne's love poetry as " a witty critique of the poetry , the poetics , and the Protestant po- lemic best represented by Sidney's works , as a sort of witty ...
Contents
ONE Sacramental Crossing | 29 |
Two Deigne at My Hands | 58 |
THREE Cunning Elements and Artful Turns | 101 |
Copyright | |
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Literature and Sacrament: The Sacred and the Secular in John Donne Theresa M. DiPasquale No preview available - 2001 |
Common terms and phrases
addresses analogy argues baptism becomes blood body bread calls Catholic chapter Christ Christian Church cited claims Communion Complete confession Corona Countess Crosse crucified death defines desire devotion discussion divine doctrine Donne's effect English Eucharist experience explains expression eyes faith fear fire Flea function Goodfriday Goodyer grace hands heart Holy human idea insists Jesus John Donne lady language less letter lines Lord lover lyric Mass means nature notes offering opening person Petrarchan phrase poem poem's poet poet/speaker poetic poetry points praise prayer preaching present Press priest Protestant puts question quoted reader reading receive refers religion religious ring Roman sacramental salvation says seal sense Sermons sonnet soul speaker speaks spiritual stanza stresses theological things Thomas thou tion true turn University unto verse visible woman writing