Product Details
Dostoevsky: Language, Faith, and Fiction (Making of the Christian Imagination)

Dostoevsky: Language, Faith, and Fiction (Making of the Christian Imagination)
By Rowan Williams

List Price: $24.95
Price: $16.47 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

38 new or used available from $14.55

Average customer review:

Product Description

Rowan Williams explores the intricacies of speech, fiction, metaphor, and iconography in the works of one of literature's most complex, and most complexly misunderstood, authors. Williams' investigation focuses on the four major novels of Dostoevsky's maturity (Crime and Punishment, The Idiot, Devils, and The Brothers Karamozov). He argues that understanding Dostoevsky's style and goals as a writer of fiction is inseparable from understanding his religious commitments. Any reader who enters the rich and insightful world of Williams' Dostoevsky will emerge a more thoughtful and appreciative reader for it.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #46795 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-07-14
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 285 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Review
Reading Dostoevsky is like looking from a high peak at several mountain ranges, some brightly lit, others dark with mist, going back farther than the eye can see. In this breathtaking book, Rowan Williams takes us on a journey through literary art, the nature of fiction, psychological depths, historical and cultural setting and allusion, and beyond all else a world of faith and doubt, of philosophy and theology not dry on the page but moist with tears of compassion. We return to Dostoevsky with new insight and wide-ranging understanding and to real life with fresh perspectives on what it means to be human, to be under threat from the demonic, and above all to sense the dark and urgent presence of the living God. --N. T. Wright, Bishop of Durham

Rowan Williams here reveals the originality and daring that have made him such a controversial (and inspiring) leader of his church. The readings demonstrate an impressive grasp of current scholarly criticism of Dostoevsky. But this is not just another book about Dostoevsky. The literary interpretations are guided by an intense humanism that shares at points surprising parallels with radical leftist critiques. As author of a previous book of Sergej Bulgakov, Williams is at home in Russian philosophy, particularly the Orthodox emphasis on kenosis, the voluntary emptying out of Christ's divine attributes during his time on earth. This aspect of Russian thought was important for Bakhtin, who serves as a kind of dialogic third partner in Williams conversation with his reader. This is a work of learning and passion, a heteroglot blend of literary, ethical, and subtle theological argument that is full of surprising local triumphs of interpretation -- and that most un-academic virtue, wisdom. --Michael Holquist, Professor Emeritus of Comparative and Slavic Literature, Yale University

Rowan Williams, in this study of Dostoevsky's characters, brings to attention the theological anthropology implicit in and generative of the narratives' dynamics. In his hands, theology becomes not a kind of explanation or completion but both a release, an opening of the narratives to the as yet unsaid, and a clarification of the continuities between the characters and the Orthodox Christianity of the setting. Crucial to this reading of Dostoevsky is an understanding of personal identity not as a possession but as a consequence of an ongoing relational process and an interweaving of freedom with a responsibility for others. As we no longer read Dostoevsky the way we did before reading Mikhail Bakhtin, so also, having read Williams, we no longer will read either Dostoevsky or Bakhtin as we once did. --Wesley A. Kort, Professor of Religion, Duke University

About the Author
Rowan Williams (Ph.D. Wadham College, Oxford) is the Archbishop of Canterbury. Having received his D. Phil. From Oxford, he held a variety of academic posts in Oxford and Cambridge, before leaving the Lady Margaret Professorship of Divinity at Oxford to be successfully Bishop of Monmouth and the Archbishop of Wales. He has published 12 books, including, most recently, Why Study the Past? (2005), Poems (2002), and Writing in the Dust: Reflections on the 11th September and Its Aftermath (2002).


Customer Reviews

Extremely smart and very profound5
This book is clear, intelligent and quite serious. The author writes more like a philosopher than a literary critic, appropriate for Dostoevsky's highly charged, philosophically oriented themes.
Along the way Williams present a profound account of the reality of spiritual life. While he and Dostoyevsky are tied into Christianity, a person with any kind of spiritual concern could learn a great deal from this.
(My own background in these matters includes several books and articles on contemporary religious life and spirituality.)

Dostoevsky; Language Faith and Fiction5
This is an excellent read. It is my second copy to purchase ... for others to read. Rowan Williams excells in providing a wonderful window on Dostoevsky's reasons for writing. The dialogical engagement between characters and reader is intentional and demanding. I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It is a must read for those who wish to engage with Dostoevsky, for those who wish, who need, to be confronted by life and faith.
Thank you Archbishop Rowan Williams and Dostoevsky