Playful Wisdom : Reimagining the Sacred in American Literature, from Walden to Gilead
Playful Wisdom examines how Henry David Thoreau's thinking about religious "play\u0022 created a theological legacy in American literature-one that includes Emily Dickinson, Jack Kerouac, Thomas Merton, Annie Dillard, and Marilynne Robinson. Although these writers differ in many ways, they share with Thoreau an improvisational "looseness\u0022 or "mobility\u0022 in their thinking about the sacred, a sense that religious experience unsettles fixed belief and alters the very shape of the perceiving self. From this perspective, Robert Leigh Davis argues, unswerving orthodoxy is not as crucial to a life of faith as a light-handed responsiveness of spirit that constantly revises fixed assumptions in light of new experiences. Dickinson describes this responsiveness as "nimble believing\u0022 and Thoreau calls it "holy play.\u0022 Scholars of literature, religion, and philosophy will find this book particularly useful. [Publisher's text]
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ISBN: 9781793626295
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