Perverse Midrash: Oscar Wilde, André Gide,and Censorship of Biblical Drama

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A&C Black, 2004 M11 3 - 180 páginas
Oscar Wilde's Salome and Andre Gide's Saul have been considered critically in the traditional contexts of authorial oeuvre, biography, or "thought." These plays have been treated with embarrassed respect, dealt with only because of the importance of their authors. That Wilde and Gide made use of biblical material seems to discomfit their critics; that they had done so at a time when biblical drama was prohibited has rarely been addressed. Traditional critical treatments seek to smooth over the plays' aberrant qualities. This study takes them seriously as aberrations and investigates Wilde's and Gide's claims that these plays are works of faith, by considering them as participating in the history of biblical drama.
 

Contenido

Nostos and Shavah Recovering Spiritual Origins
15
Unveiling Fears Literary History as Guardian of Culture
57
Manifesting Fears Oscar Wildes Salomé
95
Perverting the Text André Gides Saül
115
Perverse Midrashim
145
Works Cited
161
Index
173
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Acerca del autor (2004)

Perverse Midrash is Katherine Brown Downey's, first book. She is working on a second about the Victorian-era Anglican cleric F.W. Farrar.

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