Christianity and Literature: Philosophical Foundations and Critical Practice..
Sykes, John D., Jr.
Christianity and Literature: Philosophical Foundations and Critical
Practice. By David Lyle Jeffrey and Gregory Maillet. Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-8308-2817-3. Pp. 336. $24.00.
Literary scholars both aspiring and accomplished will look with
gratitude to this straightforward and learned presentation of the
Christian humanist tradition in the West as it bears upon the study of
English literature. As part of the InterVarsity Press Christian
Worldview Integration Series, it is clearly meant primarily to benefit
Christian students and scholars who refuse to dismiss their religious
convictions from their academic work. However, the book deserves a wider
audience than this. Scholars of all persuasions will find here both a
worthy statement of a historically central tradition and a challenge to
current assumptions from authors conversant in recent theoretical
debates. In a number of ways, Christianity and Literature will remind
readers of C. S. Lewis' work, particularly The Abolition of Man.
The volume by Jeffrey and Maillet represents the philosophically turned
reflections of serious Christian scholars of English literature on what
they take to be the baneful direction of contemporary education. Indeed,
readers of The Abolition of Man may remember that Lewis' first
extended example has to do with Coleridge's remarks on a waterfall
and whether the sublime is a mere feeling confined to human
consciousness. And yet the current volume is more capacious than
Lewis' essay, providing a kind of snapshot history of English (and
American) literature in its "practical" chapters. In this
sense, the book more nearly resembles Lewis' English Literature in
the Sixteenth Century. David Lyle Jeffrey has certainly reached the
point in his career where he has earned the right to author a book of
magisterial sweep. Readers of this journal will recognize Jeffrey as the
recipient of the Conference on Christianity and Literature's
Lifetime Achievement Award. I was put in mind of his award-winning
People of the Book: Christian Identity and Literary Culture (1996), in
which he treats some of the same issues for a more advanced target
audience. Here, in concert with Gregory Maillet, his younger Roman
Catholic co-author, he cultivates a style that is confident and clear
without being contentious. The pairing of Protestant with Catholic has
an intentional ecumenical message, as the Authors' Preface
declares: the book is meant to present a kind of "mere"
Christian consensus on foundational matters.
Part one of the three-part organizational scheme of the book is
thus unsurprisingly titled "Christian Foundations" Jeffrey and
Maillet insist that the type of theory appropriate and indeed necessary
for Christians is a correspondence theory of truth with its built-in
metaphysical realism. When we say something is true, we mean and must
mean that our statement corresponds with a state of affairs external to
our thought. With its strong insistence on a creator-savior God who
stands over against the world, the Bible assumes that human truth and
truthfulness are measured by the degree to which they reflect the divine
originator and sustainer. The authors illustrate the philosophical point
with Paurs succinct assessment of the importance of Jesus'
resurrection: If Christ has not been raised, our faith is in vain (I
Cor. 15:14). Closely related to the point about truth is one concerning
beauty. Beauty, insist the authors, must from a Christian point of view
be considered an objective quality rather than a subjective judgment, as
Kant, for example, argued. Beauty is a feature of God also found in
God's creation, and it is one we may either discover or fail to
discern. It is what makes all the arts serious business, so to speak.
Beauty bereft of ontological status lapses into a mere psychological
category. If beauty is not real in the metaphysical sense, then to call
something beautiful is to do no more than express an emotion. For
Jeffrey and Maillet, asserting the objective reality of truth and beauty
is so theologically important, that the other two types of truth
theory--coherence and pragmatic--must be rejected despite their powerful
modern proponents.
In the remainder of part one, the authors describe and carry out a
Christian philosophy of literature (a theological aesthetics) rooted in
theistic realism. This is not so esoteric an exercise as it may sound.
The authors make the persuasive case that art in general, and literature
in particular, gives us access to the good, the true, and the beautiful.
Thus it is an important task to develop the skills to discern these
transcendentals. Since Christian revelation is so deeply textual, rooted
as it is in Scripture, literary criticism becomes an inescapable task.
Appropriately, Jeffrey and Maillet close this section with a chapter on
"our literary Bible" calling attention to formal features that
must be recognized in order to achieve any level of understanding. One
of the benefits of this section is to demonstrate that the Bible can be
approached in a genuinely scholarly way that does no violence to the
coherence one must find in it if it is to serve as the church's
guide for worship and faith.
Part two is the first of two sections on literary history, and it
discusses what might be called the literature of English Christendom.
After a preliminary consideration of Augustine's theory of reading,
chapter four moves us forward to the pageant plays of the Corpus Christi
Cycle and the narrative poem Pearl. The following chapter, on
Renaissance literature, features some of the best known names in the
English canon. The section on Milton is memorable, especially for its
defense of Milton against the charge that he hubristically over-reached
his theological brief by attempting to supplement Scripture with his own
poetry. With equal unassuming ambition, our authors take on Shakespeare,
making the case that he can be read as a Christian dramatist of an
orthodox cast. The chapter on the eighteenth century is more compressed,
but manages to place Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson in the long line
of Christian humanists. We are also reminded of the impact of the
Dissenters from whom North American Evangelicals trace their ancestry on
the poetry of William Cowper and William Blake.
The final major division of the book brings us from the nineteenth
century to the present and includes a chapter on literary theory. The
chapter on the nineteenth century and Romanticism is most acute in its
treatment of Wordsworth, bearing out M. H. Abrams' point that
Romanticism sought to relocate religious authority to a certain kind of
poetic experience of nature. Although literature in this period
reflected serious doubt concerning the validity of traditional
Christianity, this was not an anti-religious age, as the impulse to
treat literature as religion attests. The story takes a turning as the
authors bring us to our own time. By the twentieth century one is likely
to encounter an atheism that shows us either a bleak world indifferent
to human concerns or a universe in which endlessly playful self-creation
is the only heroic option. According to Jeffrey and Maillet, the later
Hemingway is an example of the first alternative and Joyce of the
second. But they also point to counter examples. Just as the Victorians
produced Hopkins as well as Arnold, so the twentieth century had its
Tolkien and O'Connor.
The attitudes of modernism and postmodernism affect literary theory
no less than literature. In their final chapter, the authors show how
intellectual currents have shaped the discipline of literary study.
Noting that the deep philosophical skepticism associated with
deconstruction and some forms of semiotics undermined the very notions
of literature and criticism, Jeffrey and Maillet call attention to those
theorists who seek a new basis for finding in literature a conduit of
wisdom. The authors believe that at this point in the argument,
Christians are at an advantage, for they can assert both the divine
transcendence which historically has given literature its cultural
authority and the modesty which forbids making an idol of artistic
achievement. Even as a minority at odds with the assumptions of academic
culture, Christian scholars may and should make a contribution, as an
act of neighbor love.
This volume has many virtues, coherence and compactness among them.
In addition to the sustained historical narrative, one finds in the
selected bibliographies at the end of each chapter a brief but
representative list of secondary works, which were clearly not selected
according to some standard of an Authorized Version of criticism. Yet,
both as a pedagogical instrument and as an argument the book has
limitations. It would be difficult to use this volume as the primary
textbook in a theory course because so many of the chapters are devoted
to the literature of a certain era. The "history" chapters are
too brief, however, to serve as introductions in a more specialized
course--Victorian literature, for example. For classroom use, I think
the book would work best as a supplemental text in a theory course,
where it could be used to contextualize the historically arranged
anthologies that commonly supply basic readings for such a course.
Although elegantly written and generally persuasive, the argument
of the book sometimes borders on the schematic. For example, although
epistemological realism and a correspondence theory of truth have indeed
been central to historic Christian theology, an unqualified insistence
upon them not only obscures parts of the tradition, it can easily give
the appearance of a kind of intellectual triumphalism that makes many
critics of the church suspicious. Although Christians have certainly
insisted that through worship, word, and sacrament the God of Jesus
Christ may be truly known, the tradition also recognizes barriers to
complete knowledge. Even in scholastic realism, language of God is said
to be analogical rather than univocal in order to acknowledge the
limitations and fallibility of human reason. Similarly, the apophatic tradition takes recognition of the ultimate unknowability of God as its
basic insight. The problem with a bald declaration of Christian
correspondence theory of truth in our historical context is that it can
easily sound like an embrace of the kind of Enlightenment
foundationalism that, ironically, has sponsored both secular modernism
and religious fundamentalism. Christians need a more chastened
epistemological certainty--one that insists on the possibility (and
actuality!) of genuine knowledge, but that also recognizes human
knowledge as historically conditioned and incomplete.
The limitations of the sections on particular eras and authors are
predictable and understandable. One sympathizes with scholars painting
in broad strokes that forbid subtlety. But at times, the authors seem to
leave a misimpression by framing writers in Christian terms. For
example, although it is true that no proof exists that Shakespeare was
bisexual, to say in a brief discussion of the sonnets that those poems
addressed to the young man encourage him to marry and are often aimed at
a more general audience than the single recipient at the very least
leaves out a number of relevant matters. The sonneteer clearly seems
preoccupied with the physical beauty of the young man, for example, and
Sonnet 20 seems on the face of it to indicate a sexual interest.
Although these matters remain controverted and the conclusions of
Jeffrey and Maillet are sensible, the case is not so clear-cut as they
make it out to be. Similarly, in the final chapter, which brings us to
our own period and so covers ground where no consensus on a literary
canon exists, some of the choices seem idiosyncratic. Still, in a
contentious academic atmosphere in which a coherent, intelligent
Christian vision is often assumed to be a relic of the past, this volume
offers compelling counter-evidence.
John D. Sykes, Jr.
Wingate University