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dc.contributor.authorCallison, Jamie Christopher
dc.date.accessioned2018-02-22T09:26:11Z
dc.date.available2018-02-22T09:26:11Z
dc.date.created2017-12-18T14:16:48Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.citationCallison, J. C. (2017). David Jones’s ‘Barbaric-fetish’: Frazer and the ‘Aesthetic Value’ of the Liturgy. Modernist Cultures, 12(3), 439-462. doi:nb_NO
dc.identifier.issn1753-8629
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11250/2486340
dc.descriptionAuthor's accepted version (post-print).nb_NO
dc.descriptionThis is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Edinburgh University Press in Modernist Cultures. The Version of Record is available online at: http://www.euppublishing.com/doi/abs/10.3366/mod.2017.0186.
dc.description.abstractMuch recent critical interest in the relationship between modernism and religion has concerned itself with the occult, spiritualism, and theosophy as opposed to institutional religion, relying on an implicit analogy between the experimental in religion and the experimental in art. I argue that considering Christianity to be antithetical to modernism not only obscures an important facet of modernist religious culture, but also misrepresents the at-once tentative and imaginative thinking that marks the modernist response to religion. I explore the ways in which the poet-painter David Jones combined sources familiar from cultural modernism – namely Frazer's The Golden Bough – with Catholic thinking on the Eucharist to constitute a modernism that is both hopeful about the possibilities for aesthetic form and cautious about the unavoidable limitations of human creativity. I present Jones's openness to the creative potential of the Mass as his equivalent to the more recognisably modernist explorations of non-Western and ancient ritual: Eliot's Sanskrit poetry, Picasso's African masks, and Stravinsky's shamanic rites and suggest that his understanding of the church as overflowing with creative possibilities serves as a counterweight to the empty churches of Pericles Lewis’ seminal work, Religious Experience and the Modernist Novel.nb_NO
dc.language.isoengnb_NO
dc.publisherEdinburgh University Pressnb_NO
dc.titleDavid Jones’s ‘Barbaric-fetish’ : Frazer and the ‘Aesthetic Value’ of the Liturgynb_NO
dc.typeJournal articlenb_NO
dc.typePeer reviewednb_NO
dc.description.versionacceptedVersionnb_NO
dc.subject.nsiVDP::Humaniora: 000::Teologi og religionsvitenskap: 150nb_NO
dc.source.pagenumber439-462nb_NO
dc.source.volume12nb_NO
dc.source.journalModernist Culturesnb_NO
dc.source.issue3nb_NO
dc.identifier.doi10.3366/mod.2017.0186
dc.identifier.cristin1529065


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