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The Charge of God: Laudato Si’ read through Chesterton, Wordsworth, and Hopkins


Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Abstract

jats:titleAbstract</jats:title> jats:pG. K. Chesterton, William Wordsworth, and Gerard Manley Hopkins are set in conversation with Pope Francis’s Laudato Si’ (2015), to show how far those writers anticipate its animus against technocratic capitalism, but also, more surprisingly, how far Laudato Si’ challenges the progressive assumptions of contemporary eco-activism. Chesterton, Wordsworth, and Hopkins do not merely foreshadow and clarify the theological stakes of a papal document. By making even single words expressive of a whole worldview (achieving what William Empson called a ‘compacted doctrine’), their writings prove more imaginatively affective, as well as more theologically adequate than the communicative formalities available to the theological treatise as a genre.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

5005 Theology, 50 Philosophy and Religious Studies

Journal Title

Literature &amp; Theology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0269-1205
1477-4623

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)