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Ted Hughes and Christianity

Ted Hughes and Christianity

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David Troupes
Cambridge University Press, 7/4/2019
EAN 9781108483896, ISBN10: 1108483895

Hardcover, 262 pages, 23.5 x 15.7 x 1.9 cm
Language: English

Ted Hughes is one of the most important twentieth-century British poets. This book provides a radical reassessment of his relationship to the Christian faith, revealing his critically-endorsed paganism as profoundly and productively engaged with all the essentials of Christian thought. Hughes's intense criticism of the Reformation, his interest in restoring the Virgin Mary to her pre-Christian status as divine mother-goddess, his attempts to marry evolutionary science and scripture with a biological interpretation of the fall, his endorsement of the cross as the central symbol of the human condition, and the role of Christ in his myth of Sylvia Plath are among the many topics explored. Along the way, Troupes establishes strong thematic and intertextual links between Hughes and the American Transcendentalist tradition - a tradition which offers moments of vital illumination of Hughes's religious themes while encouraging a more generous trans-Atlantic appreciation of Hughes's literary affiliations.

1. The deeper life
2. The biological fall
3. The biblical fall
4. The crucifixion
5. Puritanism and the goddess
6. Sacrament and transcendence in River
7. Sylvia Plath
being Christlike
Afterword. Glimpses.