The Bible in the 19th Century: The Word and Its Re-wordings in British Literature and Thought (Eds. Frédéric Slaby & Élise Ouvrard)
A link sent to me recently by Frederic Slaby (of the University of Caen, France) to the latest issue of the LISA e-journal. Here are the contents of the issue, some of which look very intriguing indeed and all of which are freely available.
THE BIBLE IN THE 19th CENTURY: THE WORD AND ITS RE-WORDINGS IN BRITISH LITERATURE AND THOUGHT (Eds. Frédéric Slaby & Élise Ouvrard)
INTRODUCTION
FREDERIC SLABY 1-10
HISTORY OF IDEAS
Overview of a Controversy: The Scriptures and 19th-Century Biblical
Criticism in Great Britain
FREDERIC SLABY 11-42
S. T. Coleridge, Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit (1840): Its Place
in the History of Biblical Criticism
DAVID JASPER 43-54
Newman and the Bible
PAUL VAISS 55-84
Trollope, Liberalism and Scripture
HERVE PICTON 85-102
Thomas Henry Huxley and the Bible
CHRISTOPHE DUVEY 103-121
LITERATURE
Hirelings and Laborers: Biblical Parable in Blake’s Milton
LESLIE TANNENBAUM 122-132
The Bible and Literary Inspiration in T. De Quincey’s Suspiria
de Profundis
FREDERIC SLABY 133-153
For the Letter Killeth, but the Spirit Giveth Life: Elizabeth
Gaskell’s Rewriting of the Gospels
BENJAMINE TOUSSAINT-THIRIET 154-169
Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy and the Power of the Letter
STEPHANIE BERNARD 170-181
Myth and Biblical Imagery in De Profundis
IGNACIO RAMOS GAY 182-205
Getting to Grips with the Gospels: Interpretation and elaboration
in Marie Corelli’s Barabbas (1893)
LIZZIE WHITE 206-219
Kipling’s ‘Anglo-Indian’ Bible
ROBERTA BALDI 220-239
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